How to find mass given pressure and temperature

AI Thread Summary
To find the mass of steam in a 3-m³ rigid vessel at 10 MPa and 500°C, the specific volume of superheated steam is needed, which is 0.032811 m³/kg. Using the formula for mass, mass equals total volume divided by specific volume (mass = V/v), the calculation is performed as 3 m³ divided by 0.032811 m³/kg. This results in a mass of approximately 91 kg. The approach correctly applies thermodynamic principles to derive the mass from the given conditions.
Connor Rawls
Messages
2
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement


A 3-m3 rigid vessel contains steam at 10 MPa and 500 degC. The mass of the steam is?

I know this question involves using a thermo-table, I'm just very confused on how to find mass from the given information.

Homework Equations


Maybe PV=nRT

The Attempt at a Solution


I guessed at the fact that the steam is superheated water, so from there I looked up the pressure table for exactly that. From the given 10MPa, I found that the specific volume at 500 degC is 0.032811 m^3/kg. I'm lost on how to get a mass from this. My only guess is to use a total volume, V, and divide V by the specific volume, v. [ V/v ]
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I solved it. Apparently 3-m3 means a Volume of 3 m^3. From there I divided V/v = 3/0.032811 = 91 kg.
 
Back
Top