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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Short #52 - Enthalpy

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Careers, Business, Self-improvement, Education

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 30 April 2019

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast, Bryan dives into enthalpy. He explains what it is and how we see it at work in the HVAC/R systems we service daily.

Enthalpy is a fancy word for the total heat energy within a substance. Don't confuse it with entropy, which is the disorganization of energy in a system. We measure enthalpy in energy per mass unit, such as BTUs per pound. Enthalpy combines both the sensible and latent heat capacity; for example, it may represent the energy that it takes to evaporate the water contained in the air. (Water vapor is always present in the air, not just at boiling. Evaporation also occurs at many temperatures below the boiling point.) So, the more water vapor in the air, the more enthalpy there is.

Believe it or not, water vapor is less dense than dry air. So, we can't equate thermal mass to density. Air with a heavy concentration of water vapor has lots of latent heat trapped inside the water vapor. However, we won't recognize that heat until that water vapor condenses to a liquid at the dew point, such as on a cold evaporator coil. Relative humidity measures the moisture in the air as a ratio. An RH value of 100% indicates that the air is at saturation. That is also the point when the dry-bulb and wet-bulb temperatures will be the same.

Overall, we don't care very much about enthalpy values on their own; in HVAC work, we want to calculate changes in enthalpy across parts of the system. We care about changes over the coil, such as drops over the cooling coil. Psychrometers come in handy when you are trying to look for trends in the enthalpy content of the system.

 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, this is the HVAC school podcast. So in case you were looking for

0:07.8

maybe Mike Rose podcast, the way I heard it by Mike Rowe, this is not his podcast.

0:13.0

Although I do try to sound like him a little bit, I confess I listen to his podcast religiously,

0:17.0

and I try to sound like him. My kids notice the way that I enunciate is a little bit like his.

0:21.0

So hey, if you want to stop this and go listen to

0:24.4

micros the way I heard it then I encourage you to do so but if you wanted to listen to

0:27.9

the HVAC school podcast then thanks for doing it and before we get into it today we're

0:31.9

talking about enthalpy which is always an exciting topic a topic that everybody wants to hear all the kids are screaming in the streets about enthalpy

0:40.3

collages mosaics what do they call that when kids paint on stuff?

0:44.4

Graffiti, that's the word graffiti, painting graffiti on bridges about

0:48.0

enthalpy. So anyway, before we do that that we got to thank our sponsors.

0:51.4

Our sponsors are carrier and carrier.

0:52.8

Come. Long time sponsor of the podcast carrier makes this

0:56.7

podcast possible and they make some really great equipment and we sell it at Kalo services

1:00.1

so take a look at carrier.com refriger Refrigeration Technologies at refrig tech.

1:03.8

com. They make a lot of great products,

1:05.4

but one product that I especially like is Nylog.

1:08.0

I really do put it on everything.

1:09.8

I don't get it inside the system on purpose.

1:11.9

A lot of people want to say that it causes

1:13.6

problems with the system and I'm telling you, I'd like them to prove it to me because I think

1:17.8

Nylog works great, takes the place of oil as an assembly lubricant, and it just makes sure that

...

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