|
Definition of Subcooling
1. Noun. (physics) cooling a liquid to a temperature that is less that its saturation temperature at a particular pressure ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Subcooling
1. subcool [v] - See also: subcool
Lexicographical Neighbors of Subcooling
Literary usage of Subcooling
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. HVAC and Chemical Resistance Handbook for the Engineer and Architect: A ...by Tom Arimes by Tom Arimes (1994)
"The WMT-1 is a stainless steel subcooling trap for instrument tracer line service.
The WT-1 is ideal for low-capacity steam tracers and features an ..."
2. The Fundamental Principles of Chemistry: An Introduction to All Text-books by Wilhelm Ostwald (1909)
"If the two are to have the same energy content at the same temperature the
subcooling would have to be carried to about —160°, assuming that the values of ..."
3. The Metallography of Steel and Cast Iron by Henry Marion Howe (1916)
"On the previously polished surface of the bar this subcooling caused a martensitic
pattern to appear. At the same time the hardness of the austenitic part ..."
4. The Metallography of Steel and Cast Iron by Henry Marion Howe (1916)
"On the previously polished surface of the bar this subcooling caused a martensitic
pattern to appear. At the same time the hardness of the ..."
5. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections by Smithsonian Institution (1908)
"... steps occur frequently during thunderstorms and of magnitudes such as without
difficulty may be referred back to supersaturation or subcooling. ..."
6. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections by Smithsonian Institution (1908)
"subcooling If the above given considerations have to a certain extent the character
of theoretical speculations, since we have not yet experimentally ..."
7. The Development of the American Alligator (A. Mississippiensis) by Albert Moore Reese (1908)
"2i¡\ SUPERSATURATION AND subcooling. FORMATION OF THUNDERSTORMS In the third ...
Now the subcooling of fog and cloud has been often observed. ..."