seasar
Mechanical
- Mar 4, 2008
- 62
I have a process in which liquified CO2 with less than 1ppm of entrained O2 stored at 240 psig on one side of a ball valve with air at a few psig on the other appears to not only leak CO2 through the valve (small amounts) but the CO2 appears to absorb O2 through it as well (very small amounts but measureable). The equipment with air in it doesn't normally have it (it is a condenser for the CO2). This only happens when air is introduced to that unit and goes away when the unit is purged. Is it possible that Henry's law is having some affect? I have noticed this affect in a number of processes where O2 has been removed from a liquid (notably water with O2 less than 10 ppb in a pressurized pipe with a leaking flange gasket will pick up O2 and when the flange is fixed the problem goes away).
I would greatly appreciate any help someone could provide in articulating this, I can explain henry's law but have difficulty explaining how the leak appears to occur from the low pressure to the high pressure side.
Thanks!
I would greatly appreciate any help someone could provide in articulating this, I can explain henry's law but have difficulty explaining how the leak appears to occur from the low pressure to the high pressure side.
Thanks!