steve102
Structural
- May 30, 2011
- 4
How does oxygen get into a pressurised gas line at a leak?
When you can see leaks at a joint in the line between bottle to welding unit joint (after adding a soapy water solution), can anyone help provide a technical reference of how the air (oxygen) gets into the line to be one of the causes of porosity?
I figure:
Pressurised gas flow going past say a poorly coupled connection results in turbulence that allows gas out, and at the same time, sucks air in, yes?
The argon molecules are larger than oxygen ones. Also, the leak is via the microscopic spiral gap in threads as another factor.
I know there's the Venturi effect blah blah, but I've not been able to find anywhere that fully explains how the air gets in when the gas is at high pressure.
I think that basically the smaller air particles get sucked in as the high pressure gas passes the leak.
I'm having difficulty explaining how atmospheric pressure gets into a line where there's a positive pressure.
(The application is air into an argon supply for TIG welding, but I think this is the best forum for my query).
When you can see leaks at a joint in the line between bottle to welding unit joint (after adding a soapy water solution), can anyone help provide a technical reference of how the air (oxygen) gets into the line to be one of the causes of porosity?
I figure:
Pressurised gas flow going past say a poorly coupled connection results in turbulence that allows gas out, and at the same time, sucks air in, yes?
The argon molecules are larger than oxygen ones. Also, the leak is via the microscopic spiral gap in threads as another factor.
I know there's the Venturi effect blah blah, but I've not been able to find anywhere that fully explains how the air gets in when the gas is at high pressure.
I think that basically the smaller air particles get sucked in as the high pressure gas passes the leak.
I'm having difficulty explaining how atmospheric pressure gets into a line where there's a positive pressure.
(The application is air into an argon supply for TIG welding, but I think this is the best forum for my query).