Integral said:
You seem to want this to be complicated. I thought it was a pretty simple question.
"Simple?" Trivially. Answer the questions, and you're done.
It seems to me that this is a pretty straightforward Physical Chemistry problem.
Technically, it's mass transport; again, answering the questions saves you a lot of grief.
I do not have a text which covers it so I need a reference that will address what the rate of evaporation of water at about room temp will be.
"Literal" answer to your question, CRC plus Langmuir, 20-25 mm Hg (3 - 3.5 kPa) is 200 mol/(m
2 . s); vapor condenses at the same rate.
It would be nice if the pressure above the water could be factored in.
The Poynting correction to vapor pressures under an atmosphere or less of inert gas or other media is less than 0.1%, and is a likewise trivial correction to evaporation rate.
Consider this system:
A cylinder x cm in diam and Y cm high. It is maintained at z kPa (z can be negative) and held at Temperature T. There is a flow of F cm3 / min flowing through holes in the lid of a system.
You want the transport rate for the system you've described? 20 cm
3/min, room T, 97-8 kPa inert blanket?
Milligram of water vapor or less per minute to the "vacuum" system; raise T to 98-99 C, and boost that to 15-20
milligrams per minute; these are
maxima for optimized "vacuum" system geometry; service time to liquid overflow to "vacuum" is (V
sediment bowl/20cm
3)min. at room T, 0.1-0.2% less at near boiling T.
Since it's a "pretty simple question," now that you've been given the answers, you're on your own.