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vapourair

Vapourair is a term used in fluid dynamics and heat transfer to describe a near-equilibrium two-phase mixture of vapour from a volatile liquid and surrounding air. It is not a chemical compound but a conceptual category used in modelling evaporation, aerosol transport, and related processes.

In vapourair systems, the composition is characterized by the partial vapor pressure of the liquid and the

Formation and measurement: Vapourair forms when a liquid evaporates into an ambient gas or during atomisation

Applications: The vapourair concept informs modelling in spray drying, agricultural spraying, inkjet printing, coating processes, and

The concept is theoretical rather than a distinct substance. Different modelling approaches treat vapourair as a

History and terminology: The term appears in parts of the fluid-mechanics literature from the late 20th century

composition
of
the
carrier
air
(primarily
nitrogen
and
oxygen).
The
local
properties—density,
viscosity,
and
heat
and
mass
transfer
coefficients—depend
on
the
vapour
volume
fraction
and
the
overall
temperature.
and
spray
drying.
It
can
be
studied
with
optical
diagnostics
such
as
schlieren
imaging,
laser-induced
fluorescence,
and
mass
spectrometry,
as
well
as
with
computational
multiphase
models.
cooling
towers.
It
helps
estimate
evaporation
rates,
droplet
lifetimes,
and
heat
and
mass
transfer
between
phases.
homogeneous
mixture,
a
dispersed
two-phase
flow,
or
a
quasi-steady
vapor
fraction,
depending
on
the
level
of
detail
needed.
and
remains
non-standard.
It
is
sometimes
contrasted
with
pure
vapour
or
dry
air
models.