Compressed fluid

{{Short description|Fluid under thermodynamic or mechanical conditions which force it to be a liquid}}

File:P-v plot.png for liquid water. The compressed fluid region is located to the left of the blue line (the liquid-vapor phase boundary).]]

File:GHS-pictogram-bottle.svg pictogram for compressed gases.]]

A compressed fluid (also called a compressed or unsaturated liquid,{{Cite book|title=Engineering Thermodynamics|last=Rogers|first=Gordon|last2=Mayhew|first2=Yon|publisher=Longman Scientific & Technical|year=1992|isbn=0582045665|edition=4}} subcooled fluid or liquid) is a fluid under mechanical or thermodynamic conditions that force it to be a liquid.{{Cite book|title=Thermodynamics: An Engineering Approach|last=Çengel|first=Yunus A.|last2=Boles|first2=Michael A.|publisher=McGraw-Hill Education|year=2001|isbn=978-0071216883|edition=4|pages=65}}

At a given pressure, a fluid is a compressed fluid if it is at a temperature lower than the saturation temperature. This is the case, for example, for liquid water at atmospheric pressure and room temperature. In a plot that compares pressure and specific volume (commonly called a p-v diagram), compressed fluid is the state to the left of the saturation curve.

Conditions that cause a fluid to be compressed include:

The term compressed liquid emphasizes that the pressure is greater than the saturation pressure for the given temperature. Compressed liquid properties are relatively independent of pressure.

References

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{{Portal bar|Physics}}

Category:Fluid dynamics

Category:Gases

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