A water heater shower needs to supply warm water at temperature of 40°C. The hot water input is at 90°C and flowing with a flow rate of 0.5 kg/s at one side. On the other side, a stream of cold water flowing at 25°C. If we need the shower to supply water at 40°C at the exit, calculate the mass flow rate that is suitable for the cold water side. Assume all stream at equal pressure of 250 kPa.
The mass flow rate is the mass of a liquid substance passing per unit of time. In other words, the mass flow rate is defined as the rate of movement of liquid passing through a unit area. The mass flow is directly dependent on the density, velocity of the liquid, and area of cross-section. It is the movement of mass per unit time. The mass flow is denoted by m and the units in kg/s.
"m=\u03c1VA"
"Q = mC(T_1-T_2)"
"m =\\frac{0.5}{0.385\\times(90-40)}= \\frac{0.5}{25.025}=0.025 kg"
mass flow rate that is suitable for the cold waterside
"Q_c = mC(T_1-T_2) =0.025\\times 0.385\\times (90-25)= 0.62 \\frac{kg}{s}"
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