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Topic: LIQUID EXPANSION RATIOS  (Read 5238 times)

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samk00

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LIQUID EXPANSION RATIOS
« on: July 31, 2005, 08:36:38 PM »
Hi, i'm not an engineer, infact i'm a 16yr old student and i am conducting an investigation, but i couldnt do it alone so i need some help from the experts (you).

here is what i'm looking for. I need a list of as many liquid elements and compounds and their expansion ratios or gas factors AND boiling tempuratures (Preferably below 50 celcius). if that is too great an ask could you please tell me which liquid compound has the greatest expansion ratio when becomeing a gas and how expensive it would be to manufacture. ???

samk00

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Re:LIQUID EXPANSION RATIOS
« Reply #1 on: July 31, 2005, 08:39:11 PM »
helpful URLs are good 2

samk00

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Re:LIQUID EXPANSION RATIOS
« Reply #2 on: August 01, 2005, 01:42:31 AM »
HELP please

Offline Borek

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Re:LIQUID EXPANSION RATIOS
« Reply #3 on: August 01, 2005, 04:25:51 AM »
Don't crosspost and don't post several times on the subject - you can edit your letter if you want to add something constructive.

Go to your library and check for the CRC handbook or some similar book - it contains tons of data you are looking for.

When liquid gets gaseous it starts to behave like (almost) ideal gas and the expansion is handled by pV=nRT. This should point you in the right direction.
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