Joshua Cude <[email protected]> wrote:
> So, what specifically do you think that g/kg means in the context of a > 2-phase mixture of steam and water? > > What do you use for the denominator to calculate the total mass of the > steam? > > If it means the mass of water vapor per unit mass of water vapor, then it > should be 1000 g / kg. How do you use that? > If 10% by mass is liquid water then it would be 900 g/kg. That's the whole point. How could it measure enthalpy or partial pressure of vapour if it doesn't know how much vapour there is? > If it means the mass of water vapor per unit mass of total fluid, how could > a device that measures humidity (i.e. wetness of air) determine that? > > You are not making sense. > Not me. Complain to instrument manufacturer or Galantini. - Jed

