Preventing Frost damage by changing Air Humidity
On 03/12/2014 20:23, john t west wrote:
Looking at how some people are protecting their Green Houses against the
frost, i was surprised how tiny the flames were on the paraffin heaters
in the green houses. They were hardly giving off any heat at all.
I was told its not about the 'Heat', but the fact that the flame changes
the 'relative humidity' in the air'.
Could anyone explain fairly simply, how this actually works? Thanks
Well having high humidity in the greenhouse from the paraffin heater
means that as frost forms on the inside of the glass latent heat is
released, so that probably helps to maintain the internal air
temperature. Of course when it melts it promptly sucks all the heat back.
My back of envelope sums suggest that a kg of paraffin gives about 46 kJ
of energy when burned, while the potential latent heat of freezing of
the water produced would be about 26 kJ. So I would say that the heating
effect is more important.
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