What heat capacity is needed to evaporate water in oil

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the energy required to evaporate water from chicken nuggets in an industrial fryer with a heating capacity of 400 kW. It was clarified that to convert 1 liter of water at 100°C to steam requires approximately 0.627 kWh, leading to a total energy need of about 88 kWh for the 140 liters of moisture lost. This amount of energy is significant, suggesting that capturing the steam for reuse could be a valuable innovation. Participants noted the importance of energy recovery systems in such processing plants. The conclusion emphasizes that 88 kW is a realistic figure for the energy expenditure involved.
Adrianus
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Homework Statement


In an industrial fryer is f.e. 400 kW. Heating capacity installed. The fryer may contain as much as 1.450 ltr of oil. I can fry 2.000 kg of chicken nuggets per hour in that. These products loose 7% of moisture/water in this process. That water can only escape from oil in gas form i.e. steam.
My question is, how much of my 400 kW is spend on the undesired steam forming of the 140 liter of water coming from the product. Can anybody give an indication?
In another thread I read that it takes as much as 8 kW to evaporate 1 liter of water. This would be more than the installed power in my fryer so cannot be true in this case. The frying process seems to be a much more efficient way to create steam but is not very efficient because we do not need steam.

Homework Equations


To evaporate 1 liter of water at room temperature requires ca. 8 kW I read in another post

The Attempt at a Solution


None

[ Mod Note: member indicates he is working with this industrial fryer and he is not a student ]
 
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The problem was you had the wrong figure to evaporate , it's not 8Kwhrs/liter

2260000J to to turn 1liter water (@100C) to steam divide by 3600 = 627 Whrs = 0.627 Kw hrs ...x 140 = 87.888 Kw hrs

This is a lot of energy if some way could be found to capture this steam , put it through a heat exchanger to heat water for coffee and tea , washing dishes, you would have a million $ invention
 
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@Adrianus & @oz93666 Just to make sure it is clear, it looks to me like the two of you are using different conventions for decimals; comma versus period. So that's 1450 L of oil and 2000 kg of chicken. Unless that is lunchtime on an aircraft carrier with a single galley, that's not a kitchen, that's a processing plant.

But yeah, I certainly hope the place already has some sort of energy and water recovery system on its exhaust...

88 kW (88 kWh per hour) is real money.
 
Hi Russ, you are right, in Europe we use periods to separate 1.000 and comma b4 decimals but we have a good understanding. It is by the way for processing plants where such industrial fryers play an important role. I believe that I got a very good answer now from oz. 88 kW is a very realistic figure to work with. Thank you mr. Oz93666
 
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