This represents a structure for the end of pressure vessels, most applicably plate heat exchangers, for reducing the effects of movement changes and vibrations. |
|
While microwaves heat up food more quickly, most food tastes better when it is cooked in a conventional oven. |
|
Every summer periods of cool weather occasionally interrupt the intense heat. |
|
By contrast, Priestley preferred to observe qualitative changes in heat, color, and particularly volume. |
|
The experiment tested how various metals behave under heat and pressure. |
|
This region suffers from oppressive heat in the summer months. |
|
This measure was only performed while the patient still had natural heat in his system. |
|
Asymmetry can also occur if adjacent channel walls are isothermal but at different temperatures or isoflux but dissipating different heat fluxes. |
|
Like most other large cities, Birmingham has a considerable urban heat island effect. |
|
Organza is now often substituted for jussi, both being light, transparent fabrics well suited to the heat and humidity of the Philippines. |
|
Under the phiran her little kangri of hot coals sent long fingers of heat across her stomach. |
|
In the heat of the afternoon, while Roger Clemens threw a temper tantrum and the Boston Red Sox became unraveled, Dave Stewart kept his cool. |
|
The heat from the tarmac refracted the light and disturbed the vision of the children as they persisted in their game of kerby. |
|
Two cooling water pipes in each rail tunnel circulate chilled water to remove heat generated by the rail traffic. |
|
This causes the heat waves that can affect the south and the Midlands to be very uncommon. |
|
These networks supply heat and hot water for many buildings throughout the city. |
|
Running on too lean a fuel-air mixture will cause, among other problems, your internal combustion engine to heat up too much. |
|
As further layers settled to the sea or lake bed, intense heat and pressure build up in the lower regions. |
|
The kerogen in the rock can be converted into crude oil using heat and pressure to simulate natural processes. |
|
Since June 2013 the swimming pool at Abbey Stadium leisure centre has been heated using waste heat diverted from Redditch Crematorium. |
|
|
The 'hot' helium from the air precooler is recycled by cooling it in a heat exchanger with the liquid hydrogen fuel. |
|
This was a direct challenge to the caloric theory which held that heat could neither be created or destroyed. |
|
Joule was undaunted and started to seek a purely mechanical demonstration of the conversion of work into heat. |
|
Joule perceived the relationship between his discoveries and the kinetic theory of heat. |
|
His laboratory notebooks reveal that he believed heat to be a form of rotational, rather than translational motion. |
|
The landlord fixed the heat, but the tenants still were not mollified. |
|
The boiler is heated, not by heat of combustion, but by the heat generated by nuclear reactor. |
|
This is difficult to explain to someone not familiar with concepts of heat and thermal efficiency. |
|
But because there is no metal mass in the rotor to act as a heat sink, even small coreless motors must often be cooled by forced air. |
|
Losses also occur in commutation, mechanical commutators spark, and electronic commutators and also dissipate heat. |
|
A steam engine is a heat engine that performs mechanical work using steam as its working fluid. |
|
In the case of model or toy steam engines, the heat source can be an electric heating element. |
|
Boilers are pressure vessels that contain water to be boiled, and some kind of mechanism for transferring the heat to the water so as to boil it. |
|
As with all heat engines, the majority of primary energy must be emitted as waste heat at relatively low temperature. |
|
Sometimes the waste heat is useful itself, and in those cases very high overall efficiency can be obtained. |
|
The governor was able to handle smaller variations such as those caused by fluctuating heat load to the boiler. |
|
The benefit of this is lost somewhat due to the lower heat addition temperature. |
|
The wick allows heat pipes to transfer heat when there is no gravity, which is useful in space. |
|
If the piping of a thermosiphon resists flow, or excessive heat is applied, the liquid may boil. |
|
The water is heated passively by solar energy and relies on heat energy being transferred from the sun to a solar collector. |
|
|
The most commonly used heat exchanger is a radiator, where air is blown actively through a fan system to condense the vapour to a liquid. |
|
In some cases a thermosiphon may also be less bulky than a normal heat sink and fan. |
|
In colder climates where heating and lighting is required during the cold and dark winter months, the heat byproduct has at least some value. |
|
In August 2005, they supplied drinking water to poor people affected by the heat wave in the United States. |
|
Because of the great heat of the room, the caldarium was but slightly ornamented. |
|
Instead of allowing the juice after the incision to inspissate on the capsule, he collected it immediately and dried it by artificial heat. |
|
Whims, which at first are the aberrations of a single brain, pass with heat into epidemic form. |
|
He was abloom with heat and anxiety. The sweat underneath his arms had turned into an oily slick. |
|
Peter, instead of adjuring Miss Limpenny to fear no more the heat o' the sun, accinged himself to the practical difficulty. |
|
Such a degree of heat, which doth neither melt nor scorch, doth mellow, and not adure. |
|
However, turbulent flow along the vehicle afterbody can under some conditions produce a comparable or greater heat flux. |
|
The occasional early opening of the apricot blossom need not surprise us, if we consider this degree of heat upon the wall. |
|
Multiple blanchings soften the flesh of the chiles and subdue their heat a bit. |
|
Boy howdy, boy howdy, boy howdy! I was buried alive in noise, and the heat and cinders stung my neck and legs and the bottoms of my feet. |
|
Another area in which corporations have been catching heat is in the area of environmental pollution, and justifiably so. |
|
If you cook chevon using too high of a heat setting, the meat will lose its moisture and become tough. |
|
The blue sky is glossy and fat with heat, a few thin cirri sheared to blown strands like hair at the rims. |
|
Instead of producing thrust, they cogenerate electricity and heat, meeting another goal of the sustainability plan. |
|
The length of the night and the dews thereof do compensate the heat of the day. |
|
Compensators ensure less heat is provided to a room on a warmer day. They may be implemented mechanically, electronically or in software. |
|
|
Coolant is used in car engines and industrial processes, where excess heat could cause machine damage. |
|
All the heat of a decade of fierce Indian summers is stored in the pitch-black, polished walls of the corkscrew staircase. |
|
A more rapid technique is to cryogrind appropriate mixtures of polymer and salt and then subject the resulting powder to a modest heat treatment. |
|
Just as Hank had predicted, we had reached the work site in a dead heat with gray dawn. |
|
Dice the vegetables and heat in the double boiler with butter, pepper and salt. |
|
The ostrich layeth her eggs under sand, where the heat of the discloseth them. |
|
By help of this conception the effect of heat can be simply expressed by saying that heat tends to increase the disgregation of bodies. |
|
Further, Caulis Bambusae downbears the stomach, thus downbearing upwardly counterflowing depressive heat. |
|
Went to bed with 2 downies on the bed, but the heat finally kicked in and ended with one cover and my feet sticking out. |
|
It didn't take long for the waves of heat to reach him, and with them came the scents of tempanuts, earthberries, and honey. |
|
I am not at the mercy of the elements, ectothermically dependent on external sources of heat to spur my every move. |
|
Solar panels allow for energy transfer from light energy to heat and electrical energy. |
|
Birds initially developed wings and feathers as a means of heat regulation. The use of wings for flight is an example of exaptation. |
|
The field equations can be obtained from a thermodynamic variational principle which extremises the total heat density of all null surfaces. |
|
The bus was oppressively warm and the air-conditioning was fighting a losing battle with the heat. |
|
Tunisians love spicy food and harissa is the main ingredient used to provide the heat. |
|
A central daily event in men's lives was the firebath, which was like a sauna with intense radiant heat. |
|
The heat brought sweat and the sweat blinded. Black flinders gyrated in the fiery air like bats. |
|
Season the foie and sear until dark golden brown. Drain off and reserve the foie, adding the fat back into the pan and bring heat back up. |
|
Transfer of heat from the engine to the automobile radiator occurs by means of forced convection. |
|
|
The transfer of heat from a hot object by means of upward hot air currents from the object, is due to free convection. |
|
This light, friable type of material offered excellent insulation against both desert heat and also the cold of darkness during the winter. |
|
When Kadmi was full-burned we covered him with soil, the heat of his bones making the very earth hiss and steam. |
|
His skin was grimed with dust, for he had ridden hard in scorching heat, and was anxious and impatient to get on. |
|
The development was to heat the ingredients to around 1450C, producing clinker. |
|
The ordinary hot saw, for sawing iron at a blight red heat, differs but little from a common circular wood-saw. |
|
A form of biomass energy, this source of heat is still widely used in rural areas. |
|
Beneath the surface, they had profound and lasting influence on geothermal heat and the patterns of deep groundwater flow. |
|
Of the nuclear reactors the HTR now produces heat at the highest temperature. |
|
Although the surface is cold, the base of an ice sheet is generally warmer due to geothermal heat. |
|
I think it helped distract us from the dry, humdrum, and heat of the here and now. |
|
Nevertheless, it is often necessary to hydrocool fresh tomatoes to remove field heat and rapidly reduce respiration of the internal fruit tissue. |
|
A hypocaust was an ancient Roman system of underfloor heating, used to heat houses with hot air. |
|
His cold experience tempers all his heat, And inbred worth doth boasting valour slight. |
|
He removed the paper from the heat, and the paper blanked out. |
|
Both were carrying heat, and I slipped their pieces into my pants pockets. |
|
The alterations to the ventilation system are important, not only to heat exchange, but also the quality of the air at platform level, particularly given its asbestos content. |
|
Faraday invented an early form of what was to become the Bunsen burner, which is in practical use in science laboratories around the world as a convenient source of heat. |
|
The human habitations were crowded to bursting point, intermingled with these sources of heat, sparks, and pollution, and their construction increased the fire risk. |
|
The heat is supplied externally to a closed loop with some of the heat added being converted to work and the waste heat being removed in a condenser. |
|
|
The heat of the sunlight affected the speed of the chemical reaction. |
|
Watt independently discovered latent heat, which was confirmed by the original discoverer Joseph Black, who also advised Watt on experimental procedures. |
|
He measured the heat generated against the work done in compressing a gas. |
|
A beetle-browed chamber, long, narrow, stifling with the heat of a great fire, its flagged floor at intervals would slap with bare or bauchled feet dancing to a short reel. |
|
There was no heat, and we shivered in the belly of the plane. |
|
In some cases the heat source is a nuclear reactor, geothermal energy, solar energy or waste heat from an internal combustion engine or industrial process. |
|
Stretching a rubber band will cause it to release heat, while releasing it after it has been stretched will make it absorb heat, causing its surroundings to become cooler. |
|
Ideal Heating, owned by Stelrad and based nearby, make domestic boilers, and have diversified into air source heat pumps and solar thermal water heaters. |
|
His barbeque sauce could use a hint of cayenne to heat it up a bit. |
|
Thermosiphoning is used for circulation of liquids and volatile gases in heating and cooling applications such as heat pumps, water heaters, boilers and furnaces. |
|
It was thus when the discovery of the different expansibilities of metals by heat, gave us the means of correcting our chronometrical measurements of astronomical periods. |
|
The pain and heat, by degrees derive a vast flux of blood and humors which distend all the circumadjacent vessels, in order to quench the incendium. |
|
Thermosteric and halosteric changes may be partly due to changes in the inflowing Atlantic water and also due to changes in surface heat fluxes within the Mediterranean basin. |
|
Pogo Burns is not a guy who likes to be threatened with a rifle. Especially when it's for no good reason. You never show heat unless you plan to use it. |
|
Because of the ocean's great capacity to store and release heat, maritime climates are more moderate and have less extreme seasonal variations than inland climates. |
|
For a given amount of heat, coal required much less labour to mine than cutting wood and converting it to charcoal, and coal was more abundant than wood. |
|
Water and many other liquids do not conduct heat well. Wildland fuels in general, wood, and wood products conduct heat slowly, and so do soil and rocks. |
|
He estimated the mass of cathode rays by measuring the heat generated when the rays hit a thermal junction and comparing this with the magnetic deflection of the rays. |
|
With the hotgun, incontrast, the holding chamber and the nozzle supply continuous heat to the wax, and the wax can be injected directly into the hole as a liquid. |
|
This may result in a wildfire burning out a large area, although it has been found that heather seeds germinate better if subject to the brief heat of controlled burning. |
|
|
Contemporary accounts of his time there describe it as happy except that he apparently found the summer heat oppressive and liked to escape from it to Cambridge. |
|
Carburetor heat and mixture controls are also located on the console. A small electric fan sits on the floor to demist the bubble. It also comes in handy to deheat the pilot. |
|
Natural convection of the liquid starts when heat transfer to the liquid gives rise to a temperature difference from one side of the loop to the other. |
|
Much heat was lost when condensing the steam, as this cooled the cylinder. |
|
On the other hand, oil shales are source rocks that have not been exposed to heat or pressure long enough to convert their trapped hydrocarbons into crude oil. |
|
Embarrassed about leaving him, I asked him to accompany me. It would have been disloyal to let him broil in the heat of Cairo, while I went off to a summer resort. |
|
This meant that a considerable amount of fuel was being used just to heat the cylinder back to the point where the steam would start to fill it again. |
|
Smelting makes use of heat and a chemical reducing agent to decompose the ore, driving off other elements as gases or slag and leaving just the metal base behind. |
|
If the system also contains other fluids, such as air, then the heat flux density will be less than in a real heat pipe, which only contains a single fluid. |
|
The company's current research effort is focused on precooler heat exchanger technology, with additional funding gained from the sale of consultancy. |
|
Even if no weakening effects were noticed after one or two overheatings, the cumulative heat effects would cause embrittlement and failure after subsequent overheatings. |
|
Originally the key technology for this type of precooled jet engine did not exist, as it required a heat exchanger that was ten times lighter than the state of the art. |
|
Localized heat inleaks in cryogenic enclosures can be detected by the 'cool spots' they produce on the ambient temperature surface of the vessel outer walls. |
|
Last summer, Georgia was hit by the mightiest heat wave in living memory. |
|