Definition of Interchanger

1. [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Interchanger

intercessorial
intercessors
intercessory
intercessour
interchain
interchangable
interchange
interchange instability
interchangeabilities
interchangeability
interchangeable
interchangeableness
interchangeably
interchanged
interchangement
interchanger (current term)
interchangers
interchanges
interchanging
interchannel
interchapter
interchapters
interchondral
interchondral articulations
interchondral joints
interchromatin
interchromophoric
interchromosomal
interchurch
intercidence

Literary usage of Interchanger

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Industrial Gases by Harold Cecil Greenwood (1919)
"Another improvement introduced by Linde consisted in the pre-cooling of the gas fed into the interchanger to, say, —35° C., by means of an ammonia ..."

2. Transactions of the Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders in Scotland (1898)
"But in Professor Swing's important and valuable lectures on Mechanical Refrigeration, delivered last year before the Society of Arts, the interchanger ..."

3. Industrial Hydrogen by Hugh Stott Taylor (1921)
"The economical size of a heat interchanger unit has yet to be determined. For the catalyst chamber of 35000 cubic feet capacity adopted by the Badische Co. ..."

4. Refrigeration, Cold Storage and Ice-making: A Practical Treatise on the Art by Alexander James Wallis-Tayler (1912)
"The apparatus comprises a steam-jacketed pan, known as the concentrator, a series of tubes known as the interchanger, and a brine pump. ..."

5. Heat in Its Mechanical Applications: A Series of Lectures Delivered at the (1885)
"To cool the air further it is conveyed by a pipe to the interchanger, ... The importance of the interchanger may be illustrated thus : When the temperature ..."

6. Modern Refrigerating Machinery, Its Construction, Methods of Working and by Hans Lorenz, Harry Merritt Haven, Francis Winthrop Dean (1905)
"Both processes can hence be combined in a so.called interchanger, which effects the heat exchange between the liquids flowing in opposite directions. ..."

7. A College Text-book of Physics by Arthur Lalanne Kimball (1917)
"Compressed air at a pressure of about 200 atmospheres, and dried and purified from carbon dioxide, passes into the inner tube of the interchanger which ..."

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