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Cryogenic process engineering / Klaus D. Timmerhaus and Thomas M. Flynn

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York Springer 1989Description: 612 pISBN:
  • 9781468487589
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 660 TIM-K
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Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Course Text Book Course Text Book BITS Pilani Hyderabad 660 Text & Reference Section (Student cannot borrow these books) 660 TIM-K (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 39192
Course Text Book Course Text Book BITS Pilani Hyderabad 660 Text & Reference Section (Student cannot borrow these books) 660 TIM-K (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 32928
Course Text Book Course Text Book BITS Pilani Hyderabad 660 Text & Reference Section (Student cannot borrow these books) 660 TIM-K (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 27795
Total holds: 0

Cryogenics, a term commonly used to refer to very low temperatures, had its beginning in the latter half of the last century when man learned, for the first time, how to cool objects to a temperature lower than had ever existed na tu rally on the face of the earth. The air we breathe was first liquefied in 1883 by a Polish scientist named Olszewski. Ten years later he and a British scientist, Sir James Dewar, liquefied hydrogen. Helium, the last of the so-caBed permanent gases, was finally liquefied by the Dutch physicist Kamerlingh Onnes in 1908. Thus, by the beginning of the twentieth century the door had been opened to astrange new world of experimentation in which aB substances, except liquid helium, are solids and where the absolute temperature is only a few microdegrees away. However, the point on the temperature scale at which refrigeration in the ordinary sense of the term ends and cryogenics begins has ne ver been weB defined. Most workers in the field have chosen to restrict cryogenics to a tem­ perature range below -150°C (123 K). This is a reasonable dividing line since the normal boiling points of the more permanent gases, such as helium, hydrogen, neon, nitrogen, oxygen, and air, lie below this temperature, while the more common refrigerants have boiling points that are above this temperature. Cryogenic engineering is concerned with the design and development of low-temperature systems and components.

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