- #1
Papak
- 10
- 0
Hi again,
I was doing some experiments on heat of combustion of various fuels and determine which fuel is better by creating a calorimeter. And its simple and straight forward but i started thinking what happens to the water created by burning the fuel, as an example i was doing methanol and from the formula i get 1.05grams of water for the period of time i ran the experiment and from the amount of fuel burnt. I was thinking where is it created, where does it go what temperature will it be and how will this affect my results. I've been thinking about this for some while and am kinda confused and interested about this, it is irrelevant to my experiment but still i want to know more about it. I checked hundreds of websites and they all don't say much about what i want and my textbooks are like prehistoric and really really vague, Hoping someone can shed some light on my question. Thanks in advance
Regards Papak
I was doing some experiments on heat of combustion of various fuels and determine which fuel is better by creating a calorimeter. And its simple and straight forward but i started thinking what happens to the water created by burning the fuel, as an example i was doing methanol and from the formula i get 1.05grams of water for the period of time i ran the experiment and from the amount of fuel burnt. I was thinking where is it created, where does it go what temperature will it be and how will this affect my results. I've been thinking about this for some while and am kinda confused and interested about this, it is irrelevant to my experiment but still i want to know more about it. I checked hundreds of websites and they all don't say much about what i want and my textbooks are like prehistoric and really really vague, Hoping someone can shed some light on my question. Thanks in advance
Regards Papak