Previous in Forum: Water Property   Next in Forum: Hydrogen Fluoride (HF) Gas Measurement Problems
Close
Close
Close
2 comments
Rate Comments: Nested
Associate

Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 31

Phase Envelopes

08/04/2011 12:23 PM

Hello,

Can some one please explain Phase envelopes,

Does anyone know in detail about phase envelopes and interpreting them? Dense phases and such? and reading the graphs.

I cannot seem to grasp it and have hardly found any literature, unless im looking in the wrong place!!!

Thanks

Chemeng

__________________
ChemEng
Register to Reply
Interested in this topic? By joining CR4 you can "subscribe" to
this discussion and receive notification when new comments are added.

"Almost" Good Answers:

Check out these comments that don't yet have enough votes to be "official" good answers and, if you agree with them, vote them!
Guru
Hobbies - Musician - Engineering Fields - Chemical Engineering - New Member Engineering Fields - Control Engineering - New Member Engineering Fields - Instrumentation Engineering - New Member

Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Moses Lake, WA, USA, Thulcandra - The Silent Planet (C.S. Lewis)
Posts: 4216
Good Answers: 194
#1

Re: Phase Envelopes

08/04/2011 12:59 PM

You're going to have to do better than that! I Googled "phase envelope" and got literaly millions of hits, including images of phase diagrams.

I am a chemical engineer. You're making us look bad.

__________________
"Reason is not automatic. Those who deny it cannot be conquered by it. Do not count on them. Leave them alone." - Ayn Rand
Register to Reply Score 1 for Good Answer
Associate

Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 31
#2
In reply to #1

Re: Phase Envelopes

08/05/2011 3:15 AM

Hahaha,

i understand your frustration with me but that did not answer my question. if you dont know then ask there is no point trying to beat around the bush is there!! i googled it also (just because theres a million hits does not mean they are all relevant) but there is no clarity in the information nor the descriptions, usually books are better.

Can some one actually help.

__________________
ChemEng
Register to Reply
Register to Reply 2 comments

"Almost" Good Answers:

Check out these comments that don't yet have enough votes to be "official" good answers and, if you agree with them, vote them!

Previous in Forum: Water Property   Next in Forum: Hydrogen Fluoride (HF) Gas Measurement Problems

Advertisement