its does because it can not hold as much heat when compressed. when compress air expands it now can hold more heat and cools off. I can use a gas law to figure out how much heat energy can be released. in the equation I just make volume a constant.
@@PushpendraYadav-wh9lc do know why it get hotter. it kind like compressing gas to a liquid and when condenses it release heat. gas does similar similar when you compress it but less dramatic. how much I believe base substance. hydrogen has the lowest. when it decompresses and escapes it get hotter because it can not absorb at the heat cause by friction.
Vital ; capture the heat during the compression stage, to reheat the air on the expansion stage
How could you do that?
I've seen an article where one Australian company did just that. Cool technology.
Cool
My gosh i really didn't know that. I thought that there are too many big batteries which stores electricity and then supply the whole world
Main bahut jaldi aisa practical karne ja raha hu
Kiya kya?
😂😂😂 ha iam தமிழ் iam against your business energy.😂😂😂😂 It's very easy....
Ok
Compressing the air doesn't release the heat, if you do you are going to waste the energy.
its does because it can not hold as much heat when compressed. when compress air expands it now can hold more heat and cools off. I can use a gas law to figure out how much heat energy can be released. in the equation I just make volume a constant.
@@spark300c no bro compressing the air increases its tempreature so the air gets more heated by this logic
@@PushpendraYadav-wh9lc do know why it get hotter. it kind like compressing gas to a liquid and when condenses it release heat. gas does similar similar when you compress it but less dramatic. how much I believe base substance. hydrogen has the lowest. when it decompresses and escapes it get hotter because it can not absorb at the heat cause by friction.
@@spark300c but you said compressed gas is cooler
@@PushpendraYadav-wh9lc I said when compressed gas expands it get cooler.