I'm looking for a substance that boils at room temperature

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the search for a substance that boils at or near room temperature for use in an organic steam engine. Participants explore various substances, their boiling points, and the implications of using them in a steam engine design. The conversation includes considerations of safety, efficiency, and the potential for adjusting boiling points through pressure changes.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Experimental/applied

Main Points Raised

  • One participant expresses a desire to create an organic steam engine and seeks a substance with a boiling point close to room temperature, suggesting that adjusting pressure could allow the use of a plastic piston cylinder.
  • Another participant provides a list of substances with low boiling points, including R-11 CFC refrigerant and isopentane, noting their toxicity and flammability.
  • Some participants suggest using low pressure steam, which can boil at room temperature, but note the need for a vacuum pump and appropriate containment.
  • There is a proposal to consider using high melting point plastics instead of low boiling point liquids to allow for higher boiling substances like ethanol or water.
  • Concerns are raised about the compatibility of plastics with various solvents, as many may dissolve or swell when exposed to low boiling point liquids.
  • One participant mentions the goal of building a small current generator and discusses efficiency and design requirements, including safety considerations.
  • Another participant introduces a speculative idea about using temperature differences for energy extraction, suggesting that a substance boiling at a low temperature could absorb heat from the environment.
  • There is a discussion about the safety of using certain substances, with emphasis on protective measures and the potential dangers of flammable materials.
  • Some participants challenge earlier claims regarding the environmental impact of certain substances, particularly concerning ozone depletion.
  • One participant expresses skepticism about the feasibility of certain ideas, emphasizing the need for practical experimentation.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a variety of viewpoints regarding the best substances to use, the design of the steam engine, and safety considerations. There is no consensus on a single approach or substance, and multiple competing ideas are presented throughout the discussion.

Contextual Notes

Participants mention various substances with different boiling points and properties, but there are unresolved questions about their safety, availability, and compatibility with materials used in the engine design. The discussion also highlights the complexity of energy extraction and the latent heat involved in phase changes.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to individuals exploring steam engine design, those researching low boiling point substances for experimental applications, and participants in discussions about safety and efficiency in engineering projects.

Pisica
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TL;DR
Organic steam engine
I want to make an organic steam engine. As a test, demonstrative

And from what I've read to find a method to recover the steam and turn it back into liquid.

I am looking for a substance that has a boiling point closer to room temperature.

Possibly, it would be good to be able to adjust the boiling temperature by adjusting the pressure in the chamber.

That would allow me to use a plastic piston cylinder.
 
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Pisica said:
I am looking for a substance that has a boiling point closer to room temperature.
Here's a fairly comprehensive list of the boiling points at 1 atmosphere of liquids of varying toxicity and flammability: https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/boiling-points-fluids-gases-d_155.html
For example, R-11 CFC refrigerant (long banned due to its affect on the ozone layer but still available in reclaimed form) boils at 23.8°C.
 
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You could use low pressure steam - it can boil at room temp.
 
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russ_watters said:
You could use low pressure steam - it can boil at room temp.
I was thinking the same thing, though he might need a vacuum pump and a container to hold the contraption in.
 
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renormalize said:
Here's a fairly comprehensive list of the boiling points at 1 atmosphere of liquids of varying toxicity and flammability: https://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/boiling-points-fluids-gases-d_155.html
For example, R-11 CFC refrigerant (long banned due to its affect on the ozone layer but still available in reclaimed form) boils at 23.8°C.
Are you okay with boiling flammable materials? Isopentane C5H12 could work. It boils at 28°C.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iso....,formula C5H12, the others being pentane (n-
 
1-Chloro-3,3,3-trifluoropropene may be an option. The cis (E) isomer boils at 19.5°C, while the trans (Z) isomer boils at 39.6°C. It is a halogenated hydrocarbon, so there is some ozone-depleting risk with this substance, but the Z isomer has a very low risk from that point of view. It is non-toxic and non-flammable.

An alternative would be methyl formate, which boils at 32°C and has a high vapour pressure. The downside is that it is an irritant, and flammable.

If you want to REALLY live on the edge, hydrogen cyanide boils at 25.6°C, but I'd advise against it.
 
Guys, maybe we are looking at this wrong. What if instead of finding a low boiling point liquid to prevent the plastic from melting, we find a high melting point plastic, so the steam engine can work with boiling ethanol (78C) or boiling water (100C)?
 
Note that plastics may be swollen by solvents. Low boiling flammable simple solvents are easily found, like diethyl ether, pentane, isopentane, neopentane - but many plastics do not withstand these and dissolve or at least swell, get sticky and jam.
 
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I want a steam engine with the highest possible efficiency.

For now I want to reduce friction.
Should I choose a piston or turbine engine?

I want the following variants on a smaller scale so as not to be dangerous with the gas used.

Piston version:

But P=F/S And I think a piston with a larger surface is important.

Variant with turbine:


But on a much smaller scale.
 
  • #10
What is your ultimate goal or design requirements here? If you've never built a steam engine before and just want to prove you can, then simplicity would be the key constraint. Maybe even buy/build a kit.

Also, safety is paramount, so be mindful that we won't let this discussion go far down a dangerous path.
 
  • #11
The boiling temperature list is impressive!
Are you saying they can be found easily?
I think that one of those substances was used in medicine. We avoid that substance.

Many substances catch fire easily.
Although if they are in a tube where there is no air, theoretically they cannot burn.

Even so, protective measures must be taken:
- The experimental device should be small enough not to constitute a danger
- Safety glasses, gloves, open windows, well-ventilated space,
 
  • #12
"What is your ultimate goal or design requirements"
I want to build a small current generator that can be operated outdoors with 5V 3A, but also very efficient.
This generator uses the flame from a Zippo lighter.

Or phone charger in case of emergency.
Stirling engine kits available on the market do not have this power.

I read about a gamma Stirling engine with 40% efficiency, but it's just a dream, I've never seen it.
 
  • #13
I also have a part related to the fantasy of dreaming.
A kind of sci-fi,
Alternative energy:

The air temperature on a spring day rises from 5 to 20 degrees Celsius.

If a substance boils at 15 degrees C for example,
Then it becomes a liquid at night and a gas during the day.

And energy can be obtained from this transformation.
 
  • #14
Pisica said:
And energy can be obtained from this transformation.
Where does that energy come from? The temperature difference over time?
 
  • #15
berkeman said:
Where does that energy come from? The temperature difference over time?
yes

It's just an idea. It can be useful or useless.
When it reaches the boiling temperature, it should absorb a lot of heat from the environment.

A small practical experiment will show us if it is useful or not.
 
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  • #16
Pisica said:
yes

It's just an idea. It can be useful or useless.
When it reaches the boiling temperature, it should absorb a lot of heat from the environment.

A small practical experiment will show us if it is useful or not.
Have you decided how much you are willing to spend on the project? The cheapest transparent steam engine I can find online is ≈$1500. [ref]

I still love this idea though. I can think of at least one example of a product that runs on such technology.
 
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  • #17
smplcrtrs said:
1-Chloro-3,3,3-trifluoropropene may be an option. The cis (E) isomer boils at 19.5°C, while the trans (Z) isomer boils at 39.6°C. It is a halogenated hydrocarbon, so there is some ozone-depleting risk with this substance,
Does not follow.
Ozone decomposition is catalysed by Cl and Br only. As long as you have only C, H and F, it has no effect on ozone. IIRC I neither.
 
  • #18
OmCheeto said:
Have you decided how much you are willing to spend on the project? The cheapest transparent steam engine I can find online is ≈$1500. [ref]

I still love this idea though. I can think of at least one example of a product that runs on such technology.
They're on Amazon starting at around $100.
 
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  • #19
russ_watters said:
They're on Amazon starting at around $100.
They built diy NASA Stirling out of a soda can
 
  • #20
renormalize said:
For example, R-11 CFC refrigerant (long banned due to its affect on the ozone layer but still available in reclaimed form) boils at 23.8°C.
I couldn't find R11 to buy.


Many sprays are sold for refilling the air conditioning system for the car.
But still a freon that boils at about -10 degrees C.
R600A R134A, isobutan
 
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  • #22
Pisica said:
TL;DR Summary: Organic steam engine

I want to make an organic steam engine. As a test, demonstrative

And from what I've read to find a method to recover the steam and turn it back into liquid.

I am looking for a substance that has a boiling point closer to room temperature.

Possibly, it would be good to be able to adjust the boiling temperature by adjusting the pressure in the chamber.

That would allow me to use a plastic piston cylinder.
I think that if very little energy is required to change the working liquid into a gas, then very little energy can be extracted from the energy differences between the gas and the liquid.
So, if room temperature is the temperature of the gas, you might need a refrigerated ambient environment, from which you could warm your liquid :)
 
  • #23
desertshaman said:
I think that if very little energy is required to change the working liquid into a gas,
Just because the temperature difference between ambient and the boiling point is small does not mean that the latent heat of boiling is small.
desertshaman said:
then very little energy can be extracted from the energy differences between the gas and the liquid.
So, if room temperature is the temperature of the gas, you might need a refrigerated ambient environment, from which you could warm your liquid :)
Or the ambient environment which, in distinction to the room, is not heated and therefore not at room temperature.
 
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  • #24
I want to make a clarification:


I have not built, I will not build and I do not recommend anyone to do what they see in the video!!!!!

What we see in the video with good and bad was just to discuss them!!!!!

When I say I want to do something similar, I mean similar, i.e. a steam engine but harmless like in these educational kits:

I'm not advertising, I'm just clarifying what I mean.
With such an educational kit I want to educate myself.
https://www.ministeam.com/products/wilesco-d9

1744073531475.png

Again, I'm not referring to this exact kit, because I'm not advertising. I mean things like this.
 

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