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  2. Thermal immersion circulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_immersion_circulator

    A thermal immersion circulator comprises a circulator pump or motorized impeller to move the fluid, a heating element immersed in the fluid, an accurate temperature probe, and control circuitry which compares the measured temperature with the desired value and supplies power to the heater as required to stabilize the temperature.

  3. Laboratory water bath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laboratory_water_bath

    This type of water bath relies primarily on convection instead of water being uniformly heated. Therefore, it is less accurate in terms of temperature control. In addition, there are add-ons that provide stirring to non-circulating water baths to create more uniform heat transfer. [4]

  4. Circulator pump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circulator_pump

    This avoids one of the principal challenges faced by the larger, two-part pumps: maintaining a water-tight seal at the point where the pump drive shaft enters the pump body. Small- to medium-sized circulator pumps are usually supported entirely by the pipe flanges that join them to the rest of the hydronic plumbing. Large pumps are usually pad ...

  5. Forced circulation boiler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_circulation_boiler

    The secondary pump takes the feed water going to the boiler and raises the pressure of the water going in. In a natural circulation boilers, the circulation of water is dependent on the differential pressures caused by the change of density in the water as it is heated. That is to say that as the water is heated and starts turning to steam, the ...

  6. Laboratory bath - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laboratory_bath

    A laboratory bath could refer to any of the following: Cooling bath: a laboratory device that lowers the temperature of the bath or improves heat conduction; Heated bath: a laboratory device that raises the temperature of the bath to enhance a chemical reaction; Laboratory water bath: a laboratory device that maintains the temperature of the bath

  7. Zone valve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zone_valve

    Higher initial installation cost. Circulator pumps cost more than zone valves; Higher power consumption. Operating circulators draw more power any time the zone is actively heating. Zone valves, by comparison, draw little power at any time and many designs only draw power while in transition from open to close or vice versa.

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