vmelkon
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I want to cool down my room with ice
What's wrong with my calculation?
I am ending up with 5.05 g of ice @ -20 °C is needed and that is obviously wrong.
Room width (m) = 5
Room length (m) = 6
Room height (m) = 2.5
Volume of air (m3) = 75
TOTAL (cm3) = 75000000
Air temperature (°C) = 27
Heat capacity (J/(g*K)) = 0.001006
Air density (kg/m3) =1.2041
Air density (g/m3) = 1204.1
Air density (g/cm3) =0.0012041
Mass of air (g) = 90307.5
I want to take the temperature down to (°C) = 20
Quantity of energy that must be removed (J) = 635.945415
Ice temperature (°C) = -20
Heat capacity of ice (J/(g*K)) = 2.11
Heat capacity of water (J/(g*K)) = 4.1813
Mass of water needed (g) = 5.05
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Fulmen
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You need to
a) Account for all the mass in the room, not just the air.
b) calculate the heat flux going into the room.
We're not banging rocks together here. We know how to put a man back together.
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Bert
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(C) Account for air exchange in the climate controlled area- Unless you're not planning on breathing in there, and like high humidity...
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2. List any points of agreement (especially if they are not matters of general or widespread agreement).
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4. Only then are you permitted to say so much as a word of rebuttal or criticism.
Anatol Rapoport was a Russian-born American mathematical psychologist (1911-2007).
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vmelkon
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Accounting for the junk in my room would be difficult.
I would estimate that the temperature would go up by ~1 °C per hour if my initial room temp is 20 and outside, it is 27. (Of course, it would not be
linear).
Also, I did not include into my calculation the phase change of the ice to water, so instead of 5.05 g of ice, it would be some lower value.
Thanks guys.
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Praxichys
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Your math is off by a factor of 1000.
The specific heat of air at 20C is 1.005 kJ/kg·K, which is also 1.005 J/g·K. Watch your unit analysis.
So the real answer is about 5kg, not 5g.
Of course, as mentioned above, the latent heat of objects in the room will reheat the air fairly quickly since their combined surface area is much
greater than that of the ice.
You should recalculate with the Hf. It is significant at 0.333 kJ/g.
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DoctorOfPhilosophy
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You also forgot to consider the enthalpy of fusion of water, assuming your ice will melt.
Never mind, you did mention that. Your assertion that the room heats up by 1 degree per hour is not enough information, we need to know one of the
following variables (or we need a second equation): (1) the heat capacity of the room (2) the thermal conductivity of the walls. The surface area of
your room is 115 m^2; fiberglass insulation has an R value of around 0.5 m2·K/(W·in); and I'll assume you're house is built with 2x4 studs so you
have 4 inches of insulation. That means the resistance of the walls is (4 inches) x (0.5 m2·K/(W·in)) / (115 m^2) = 0.01739 K/W; the conductivity is
57.5 W/K.
Since calculating how much ice you have to melt to reach 20 C requires solving a differential equation, and making further assumptions (about how
quickly ice melts, which in turn depends on how quickly air moves past the ice and what form the ice is in, and all intermediate shapes the ice takes
on as it melts), I will make it a lot simpler by figuring out how much ice you have to melt per second to keep the room cool.
It's 27 C outside, 20 C inside. So with a thermal conductivity of 57.5 W/K, the walls leak 402.5 W. Now we need to know how much energy is released
when H2O goes from -20 to 20 C.
Enthalpy of fusion: 333.55 J/g
Heat capacity of ice (J/(g*K)) = 2.11
2.11 x 20 = 42.2 J/g
Heat capacity of water (J/(g*K)) = 4.1813
4.1813 x 20 = 83.626 J/g
All three steps together: 2.11+42.2+83.626 = 127.9 J/g
402.5 W / (127.9 J/g) = 3.147 g/s.
Therefore, if you melt 3.147 g/s of ice you should approach the desired temperature assuming that your room is constructed only of 4 inches of
fiberglass insulation.
As for Bert's comment, I am assuming that OP has a heat recovery ventilator that is approaching 100% efficiently (the one in my house is pretty damn
good, over 90% I think). That way he can breathe comfortably without losing heat
[Edited on 14-7-2016 by DoctorOfPhilosophy]
[Edited on 14-7-2016 by DoctorOfPhilosophy]
[Edited on 14-7-2016 by DoctorOfPhilosophy]
[Edited on 14-7-2016 by DoctorOfPhilosophy]
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vmelkon
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Quote: Originally posted by Praxichys | Your math is off by a factor of 1000.
The specific heat of air at 20C is 1.005 kJ/kg·K, which is also 1.005 J/g·K. Watch your unit analysis.
So the real answer is about 5kg, not 5g.
Of course, as mentioned above, the latent heat of objects in the room will reheat the air fairly quickly since their combined surface area is much
greater than that of the ice.
You should recalculate with the Hf. It is significant at 0.333 kJ/g.
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Thanks dude. I'm not sure why I had used 0.001005 J/g·K.
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vmelkon
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Quote: Originally posted by DoctorOfPhilosophy | Therefore, if you melt 3.147 g/s of ice you should approach the desired temperature assuming that your room is constructed only of 4 inches of
fiberglass insulation. |
Thanks, it is interesting to see the units / equation in action.
Having to melt 3.147 g/s of ice means that much ice going from -20 °C to +20 °C in 1 second, which is not realistic.
Yes, I would be walking in and out of my room, so there would be significant leakage of air from the next room. My PC is in my room and so am I. My PC
monitor is about 100 W. I think the PC is 300 W on Idle and maybe 400 W if gaming.
Maybe my body output 100 W. My LED bulb outputs 10 W.
Yup, it gets complicated.
Signature ==== Is this my youtube page? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tA5PYtul5aU
We must attach the electrodes of knowledge to the nipples of ignorance and give a few good jolts.
Yes my evolutionary friends. We are all homos here.
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j_sum1
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As an aside, I once attended an end-of-year function at a school. There were some 500 students in the assembly hall plus staff and parents. It was a
hot day and there was no air conditioning.
A pretty good attempt was made to control the temperature using about ten 20kg blocks of ice hanging in cloth bags in front of ordinary fans. I was
quite close to one of these and was reasonably comfortable. I am sure that others in the room were not. But the idea does have merit.
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Sulaiman
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If the air is dry then a fan blowing over a damp cloth will cool the air, the cloth can 'wick up' water from a reservoir.
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AJKOER
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Quote: Originally posted by Sulaiman | If the air is dry then a fan blowing over a damp cloth will cool the air, the cloth can 'wick up' water from a reservoir. |
I you live in dry states like Arizona, this method is very effective and competitive to air conditioning.
A simple experiment, spin a damp wash cloth in dry air and feel the significant cooling effect.
See, for example, http://www.newair.com/kb/the-secrets-to-keeping-cool-with-ev...
A secondary advantage, you have also adjusted your excessively dry air.
Note, not mentioned in some promotional material is what the total effect of such products could be in more humid environments. Yes, the temperature
in the room may still drop, but the natural ability of your body to cool itself (likewise through evaporative cooling) is impaired as the humidity
increases. Bottom line, you may not actually feel (or be) cooler.
[Edit] The article link above does cite an interesting idea of using ones central air conditioner to provide some reduced level of cooling with
dehumidifying. Then, use a portable evaporative cooler to 'cool' select areas. This dual strategy can save energy, and is more compatible with more
green/solar powered homes, where the energy reserve may be limited.
[Edited on 6-8-2016 by AJKOER]
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Morgan
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I remember stopping along the road somewhere in the desert southwest where there was a funny arrangement along the side of some small gift store and
wondered what the heck was that and concluded it was some kind of water evaporation cooling device. Maybe as a bonus the humidity would be good for
your skin.
Here's one for a car.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/af/1949_Hud...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evaporative_cooler
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Car_cooler
[Edited on 6-8-2016 by Morgan]
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vmelkon
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Interesting.
I had heard that ancient egyptians would hang a wet cloth on the window. If the wind blows inside, you get cooled air.
Signature ==== Is this my youtube page? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tA5PYtul5aU
We must attach the electrodes of knowledge to the nipples of ignorance and give a few good jolts.
Yes my evolutionary friends. We are all homos here.
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