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The letter by M. N. Berberan-Santos in the
October 2000 issue of J. Chem. Educ., concerning the
temperatures of heaven and hell according to Biblical evidence,
brought to mind a similar conundrum that occurred to me some
years ago and which, so far as I know, has not been discussed in
a forum such as this Journal.
In the Old Testament book of Daniel (Dan. 3:12-23)
it is recorded that three men--Shadrach, Meschach, and
Abed-Nego--were ordered to be cast into a blazing furnace. They
had so incurred the wrath of King Nebuchadnezzar that
instructions were given that the furnace was to be made "seven
times hotter" than usual. Nebuchadnezzar clearly did not know
his combustion science, otherwise he'd have realized that this
was a waste of fuel and effort.
The maximum temperature that any fuel-air system
can attain is the stoichiometric adiabatic value: that which
is reached when there is sufficient oxygen for total
oxidation of the fuel and all of the heat is retained in the
combustion products. Excess air or excess fuel will lower the adiabatic
flame temperature because of the effect on the total heat
capacity of the post-combustion products.
It is of course true that this value is for reactants
(fuel and air) initially at room temperature, and that higher
temperatures are obtainable by pre-heating one or both of
these. This is common in fuel technology, in such techniques
as regenerative burning. However, if in the case under
discussion making the furnace "seven times hotter" consisted
of throwing in seven times as much fuel without any
modification to the air supply, this might even have had the effect of
lowering the flame temperature. The adiabatic flame temperature
is always in the neighborhood of 2000 °C. Even this is only
an "upper bound" for most practical purposes because of
heat transfer to the surroundings. On the basis of the simple
adiabatic flame temperature idea, there would be no question
that excess fuel would lower the flame temperature. Pre-heating
of reactants can occur naturally if fuel and air at
incipient ignition receive heat from a neighboring assembly that
has already ignited. We shall never know to what extent, if at
all, Nebuchadnezzar made provision for this!
What then are we to make of the statement (Dan.
3:22) that the men charged with the barbarous task of
casting Shadrach, Meschach, and Abed-Nego into the furnace
were themselves killed by the excessive heat? Possibly the
furnace walls failed through the overloading, but otherwise this
might simply be literary license. I am trespassing here into an
area in which I am by no means an expert, but I am given
to understand that even in New Testament times
writers of repute would sometimes embellish a narrative to give it
greater thrust. To do so was not, by the standards of those
times, unprofessional.
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