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  2. Kerosene heater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerosene_heater

    The Japanese non-vented "fan" heater burns kerosene gas and is known as a gasification type heater. The liquid kerosene fuel is pre-heated via an electric heating element to vaporize the fuel. The resulting gas is collected and forced into the burn chamber where it is ignited and burns with a blue flame, similar to propane.

  3. Kerosene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerosene

    A truck delivering kerosene in Japan Kerosene storage tank. Kerosene is widely used in Japan and Chile as a home heating fuel for portable and installed kerosene heaters. In Chile and Japan, kerosene can be readily bought at any filling station or be delivered to homes in some cases. [45]

  4. Storage water heater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storage_water_heater

    Solar heat is clean and renewable. This is the most modern system. Increasingly, solar powered water heaters are being used. Their solar thermal collectors are installed outside dwellings, typically on the roof or walls or nearby, and the potable hot water storage tank is typically a pre-existing or new conventional water heater, or a water heater specifically designed for solar thermal.

  5. Boilover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boilover

    Boilover onset mechanism. The extreme violence of boilovers is due to the expansion of water from liquid to steam, which is by a factor of 1500 or more. [3] In practical storage scenarios, the presence of water under the burning fluid is sometimes due to spurious accumulation during plant operation (e.g., rainwater entering a seam in the tank roof, off-specification products from the source ...

  6. RP-1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RP-1

    The launcher's central kerosene tank is surrounded on four sides and the top by liquid oxygen tanks with a liquid nitrogen tank at the bottom. The kerosene tanks of the four boosters are relatively small and compact, also located between a liquid oxygen and a liquid nitrogen tank. Thus, once the kerosene was initially chilled, it would remain ...

  7. Tankless water heating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tankless_water_heating

    Hybrids have small storage tanks that temper incoming cold water. Thus they only have to increase water temperature from warm to hot, unlike tankless which has to raise completely cold water to hot. The defining characteristics of a "hybrid water heater" are: A combination of the water flow capacity of a tank, and efficiency of tankless

  8. Thermal energy storage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_energy_storage

    The salt melts at 131 °C (268 °F). It is kept liquid at 288 °C (550 °F) in an insulated "cold" storage tank. The liquid salt is pumped through panels in a solar collector where the focused sun heats it to 566 °C (1,051 °F). It is then sent to a hot storage tank.

  9. Scalding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scalding

    First, the site of the injury should be removed from the source of heat, to prevent further scalding. If the burn is at least second degree, remove any jewelry or clothing from the site, unless it is already stuck to the skin. Cool the scald for about 20 minutes with cool or lukewarm (not cold) water, such as water from a tap. [3]