- See superheater for the device used in steam engines.
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Hemmings Auto Blogs " Blog Archive " superheated Smokey Fiero
... bought Smokey Yunick's experimental superheated-fuel 1984 Fiero. ... Hemmings Auto Blogs is proudly powered by WordPress. Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS) ...blog.hemmings.com/index.php/2007/05/11/superheated-smokey-fi...The Gadgets Weblog: Superheated Steam Cleaner
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Email forward claims that a cup of water boiled in a microwave ... HS Blog. HS About. Privacy Policy. HS Site Map. True Emails. Virus Hoaxes. Giveaway Hoaxes ...www.hoax-slayer.com/microwave-water.htmlDownload Superheated Videos
Superheated User Channels. Random Idiots By: Chimberlina24. Views: 1457. Subscribers: none ... Buzz. About Us. Press. Blog © 2008 Metacafe Inc. Search. Family ...www.metacafe.com/tags/superheated/page-3/Houston's Clear Thinkers: The super-heated free agent market
Houston's Clear Thinkers. Longtime Houston attorney Tom Kirkendall's observations ... Dodgers rightfielder J.D. Drew opted out of the final three years of his $11 ...blog.kir.com/archives/2006/11/the_superheated.asp- See superheater for the device used in steam engines.
In physics, superheating (sometimes referred to as boiling retardation, or boiling delay) is the phenomenon in which a liquid is heated to a temperature higher than its standard boiling point, without actually boiling. This can be caused by rapidly heating a homogeneous substance while leaving it undisturbed (in order to avoid the introduction of bubbles at nucleation sites). Superheated liquids can be stable above their usual boiling point if the pressure is above atmospheric (see superheated water). This article refers only to liquids above their actual boiling point in a metastable state.
Mechanics
With the exception of superheated water below the Earth's crust, a superheated liquid is usually the result of artificial circumstances. Being such, it is metastable, and is disrupted once the circumstances abate, leading to the liquid boiling very suddenly and violently (a steam explosion).
Superheating is sometimes a concern with microwave ovens, because it can occur when a person puts an undisturbed cup of water into the microwave and heats it. Once finished, the water appears to still be below the boiling point. However, once the water is disturbed, some of it violently flashes to steam, spraying near-boiling water out of the container, possibly onto the person holding it. This can be simply from contact with the cup, insertion of a stirring device, or the addition of substances like instant coffee or sugar. The chances of superheating are greater with smooth containers, like brand-new glassware that lacks any scratches (scratches can house small pockets of air, which can serve as a nucleation point).
Rotating dishes in modern microwave ovens can also provide enough perturbation to prevent superheating.
There have been some injuries by superheating water; this occurs when a person makes instant coffee and adds the coffee to the superheated water, sometimes resulting in an "explosion" of bubbles. However, this is rare and can only happen under certain conditions. There are ways to prevent superheating in a microwave oven, such as putting a popsicle stick, plastic spoon, or sugar cube in the glass, or having a scratched container to boil the water in. A foreign object added to the water prior to heating greatly diminishes the chance of an explosion because it provides nucleation sites.
Superheating also occurs in nuclear reactors and other types of high-temperature steam generators used for producing electricity, and is guarded against when it leads to corrosion or embrittlement of metal pipes.
Magnetrons, such as those used in microwave ovens, can also superheat steam in steam-power or steam-heating circuits, exponentially increasing steam thermal capacity. Advanced theories include powering the magnetron superheating circuit from electricity generated by the waste heat from the main steam circuit, resulting in additional heating BTUs for buildings at zero additional fuel cost or additional fossil fuel pollution.























