paulraphael
Bioengineer
- May 20, 2008
- 6
Hi everyone,
I'm going to be working with liquid nitrogen for the first time and have some questions about valves. We would have prefered to work with a non-pressurized dewar, for the sake of simplicity and safety, but meager budgets led us to a used Alloy Products 304 stainless pressurized one.
It appears to be in good condition, but as a matter of principal I don't trust the valves on the thing, especially the relief valve.
Can anyone recommend a good source for these parts? I'd prefer a place where a knowledgeable sales person could talk to me on the phone, patiently, as if I'm a 2 year old.
We would like to get an appropriate pressure relief valve, some kind of fail-safe relief (a blow off valve or equivalent), and a gate valve or something we can use to dispense LN2 into a smaller dewar.
As an unrelated question, something strikes me as odd about this dewar: it's not insulated. Is this normal? What's the idea behind a single-wall stainless LN2 dewar? Its got about 18L capacity and is rated to 140psi. How long might the LN2 actually stick around in something like this? And wouldn't it get encased in ice from condensation?
Thanks in advance for any thoughts,
Paul
I'm going to be working with liquid nitrogen for the first time and have some questions about valves. We would have prefered to work with a non-pressurized dewar, for the sake of simplicity and safety, but meager budgets led us to a used Alloy Products 304 stainless pressurized one.
It appears to be in good condition, but as a matter of principal I don't trust the valves on the thing, especially the relief valve.
Can anyone recommend a good source for these parts? I'd prefer a place where a knowledgeable sales person could talk to me on the phone, patiently, as if I'm a 2 year old.
We would like to get an appropriate pressure relief valve, some kind of fail-safe relief (a blow off valve or equivalent), and a gate valve or something we can use to dispense LN2 into a smaller dewar.
As an unrelated question, something strikes me as odd about this dewar: it's not insulated. Is this normal? What's the idea behind a single-wall stainless LN2 dewar? Its got about 18L capacity and is rated to 140psi. How long might the LN2 actually stick around in something like this? And wouldn't it get encased in ice from condensation?
Thanks in advance for any thoughts,
Paul