weed78
Mechanical
- Mar 24, 2006
- 13
We are trying to bring back to life an old perlite insulated liquid O2 tank.
We have been pumping down the vacuum in the insulation space but can not get down below about 400 microns.
With the tank isolated from the pump we pull down to less than 10 microns so the pump appears to be capable of doing the job. Helium leak testing has not found any external leaks. Any ideas as to what may be happening there?
Another weird observation is that when we close the valve at the pump, we are reading a differential pressure between the tank and the vacuum hose to the pump of about 100 microns. We expected to see the two pressures equalized after a few hours but this is just not happening. We know that there is some kind of screeing device behind the vacuum connection to the tank but we still expected that after some period of time the pressures would equalize.
Is there some weird phenomenon happening at this high vacuum level that is preventing the tank and piping to equalize in pressure?
Thank you for you thoughts.
We have been pumping down the vacuum in the insulation space but can not get down below about 400 microns.
With the tank isolated from the pump we pull down to less than 10 microns so the pump appears to be capable of doing the job. Helium leak testing has not found any external leaks. Any ideas as to what may be happening there?
Another weird observation is that when we close the valve at the pump, we are reading a differential pressure between the tank and the vacuum hose to the pump of about 100 microns. We expected to see the two pressures equalized after a few hours but this is just not happening. We know that there is some kind of screeing device behind the vacuum connection to the tank but we still expected that after some period of time the pressures would equalize.
Is there some weird phenomenon happening at this high vacuum level that is preventing the tank and piping to equalize in pressure?
Thank you for you thoughts.