superheated steam is also only possible under pressure. e.g. in a sealed volume.
Heating a liquid (or gas) globule in a variable volume will only have it increase it's volume. Boyles law: V*P/T = Constant or for a ideal gas: PV = nRT, nb increase temperature and the product of pressure and volume will increase, usually pressure is exchanged for more volume, so that internal pressure is equal to external pressure. Point is equilibrium is maintained.
Consider also the cold that is created by releasing the pressure from a CO2 canister (actually increasing the volume of CO2 through a narrow opening) compared to the heat that is generated if you abuse a bicycle pump.
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Umm... superheated steam is steam which is heated above the boiling point. Pressurized steam is steam which is above outside pressure. You can have steam which is pressurized, or superheated, or both, or neither. Steam at 1 bar and 120 C is superheated.
Steam is not an ideal gas. If you decrease temperature or volume (keeping mass constant) enough, it will condense.
In steam systems, volume is normally constant. (Boilers being made of strong metals and all). Superheating may or may not be used, and the steam may or may not be pressurized.
Don't confuse -changing- the boiling point of water with getting liquid water above the boiling point. Yes, it's possible to get water into a metastable state, but not ice.
"Cold" is not generated. Boiling CO
2, as well as expanding gases, absorbs heat from the surroundings. That reduces temperature.
If you're going to be pendantic, be reasonably accurate.
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Every application I can think of for pressurized gases is outside the technology level limit. Why the push for modeling gas pressure? I'd love to carve a watt engine out of stone rooms, or make a magma-powered steam lift pump, but it's just as thematically inappropriate as canister shot.
Will we see implementations of latent heat as well as sensible heat? (I think I saw a 'specific heat capacity' value in the raws) Will magma lose its property of "always hot", and cool through methods other than having water dumped on it?