Definition of Evaporator

1. n. An apparatus for condensing vegetable juices, or for drying fruit by heat.

Definition of Evaporator

1. Noun. A piece of equipment used to evaporate the solvent from a solution ¹

2. Noun. The part of a refrigerator that absorbs heat by evaporating a refrigerant ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Evaporator

1. [n -S]

Medical Definition of Evaporator

1. An apparatus for condensing vegetable juices, or for drying fruit by heat. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998)

Lexicographical Neighbors of Evaporator

evanishments
evans blue
evansite
evaporable
evaporate
evaporated
evaporated milk
evaporates
evaporating
evaporation
evaporations
evaporative
evaporative cooler
evaporative cooling
evaporatively
evaporator (current term)
evaporators
evaporimeter
evaporimeters
evaporite
evaporites
evaporitic
evaporometer
evaporometers
evapotranspiration
evapotranspirational
evapotranspiratlon
evapotranspirator
evapourate
evar

Literary usage of Evaporator

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Supreme Court Reporter by Robert Desty, United States Supreme Court, West Publishing Company (1887)
"... B. Each movable upright, I, is provided with a rack-bar, n, and the two rack-bars on the same side of the evaporator an operated by pinions, p, ..."

2. Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society by Royal Meteorological Society (Great Britain) (1892)
"This form of evaporator was found extremely convenient in carrying on all evaporation experiments ; it was floated on a tank 4 feet in diameter, ..."

3. Evaporating, Condensing and Cooling Apparatus: Explanations, Formulae, and by Eugen Hausbrand (1916)
"THE processes which occur in a multiple evaporator, both in regard to the efficiency and the consumption of steam, are somewhat more complicated than in a ..."

4. Evaporating, Condensing and Cooling Apparatus: Explanations, Formulae, and by Eugen Hausbrand (1903)
"THE processes which occur in a multiple evaporator, both in regard to the efficiency and the consumption of steam, are somewhat more complicated than in a ..."

5. Naval Hygiene by James Duncan Gatewood (1909)
"In addition to the steam connections and drain of evaporator coils indicated above, the evaporators themselves are so connected that the steam generated in ..."

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