mfg88 said:
if i have vessel contains 100 m^3 of water and the surface area is 500 m^2 and the relative humidity is 50% and the speed of air is 0.5 m/s what is pressure drop that i need to evaporate this volume of water during 24 hours?
Firstly, just what do you mean by “pressure drop”? Vapor pressure? Atmospheric pressure? And how do you plan to drop it? Is this in a controlled laboratory setting, or out in the open air?
Secondly, you have provided insufficient information with which to solve the problem.
We need to know:
1) Surface temperature of the water and whether this temperature will be maintained as the enthalpy of vaporization removes thermal energy from the water during vaporization. Surface temperature affects the gross rate of vaporization and the enthalpy of vaporization also varies with the temperature.
2) Temperature of the air. If it is the same as that of the water, fine. If it is different, then we need to know whether this temperature differential will be maintained throughout the process. Air temperature affects the gross rate of condensation and the relative humidity.
3) Pressure of the air. Along with the RH and the wind speed, this affects the gross condensation rate. Net vaporization is gross vaporization minus gross condensation.
4) Surface energy of the water and whether this energy will be maintained throughout the process (minerals in solution?). Surface energy affects the gross rate of vaporization and varies with the temperature and the strength of the various surface bonding forces.
5) Will the RH be maintained at a steady 50% as net evaporation increases?
6) If natural cooling of the water is permitted, will the water be able to draw heat from its environment? If so, how much and at what rate?
7) The evaporation of one-hundred cubic meters of water at a temperature of 25°C and 1000 hectopascals of pressure will produce roughly 130,000 cubic meters of water vapor. Where is all that vapor going to go?
As you can see, the problem is not a simple one. I suspect, however, that engineers have come up with approximate solutions. Have you tried the Engineering Toolbox?