Abstract

ABSTRACT Drying of porous solids was experimentally investigated in superheated steam as well as in air. Drying rate curves, including critical moisture contents, in steam at subatmospheric pressure, were compared to those for air at atmospheric pressure; moreover, they were compared to those for steam at atmospheric pressure as well. The former comparison was carried out under conditions of sample temperatures of 41.8–42.5°C (which were nearly equal to saturation temperatures of 42.1–42.2°C at pressures of 8.23–8.30 kPa) for the constant rate period in steam and the corresponding sample temperatures of 42.0–45.0°C (which were close to the wet-bulb temperatures) for the constant rate period in air. There were distinct differences between normalized drying rate curves, including critical moisture contents in steam and in air at the above similar sample temperatures for materials of baked clay, firebrick, and cemented glass balloons over the minimum value of 8.3 × 10−3 µm and up to the maximum value of 1.2 × 102 µm in cumulative pore-size distributions: longer constant rate periods and lower critical moisture contents in steam than in air, and higher drying rates in steam than in air for the falling rate period. Moreover, the latter comparison of the drying rates in steam at subatmospheric pressure to those in steam at atmospheric pressure revealed that the differences in normalized drying rates between subatmospheric pressure and atmospheric pressure were small for both materials under mild external conditions. These findings were common to the baked clay, firebrick, and cemented glass balloons over a wide range of pore-size distributions studied in the present work, as well as sintered coarse glass beads as previously reported.

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