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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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Mr G H Ireland wrote:
In article , "Daniel A. Mitchell" wrote: Your understanding of liquid oxygen containers is essentially correct .. they are normally 'dewars', or super thermos bottles. They are not normally pressurized to any great extent ... just enough to force the liquid out a discharge tube, usually. I had an interesting experience with a liqud Nitrogen Dewar. We wanted a couple of litres of liquid N2 in the lab. I went with a colleage to the spherical N2 bulk tank in the yard, with a 2-litre Dewar. We cracked the discharge open a tiny way and directed the liquid into our Dewar, whereupon,it came straight out again. There was no way we could sample that N2 in the way that we tried. In the end, we went to the research lab, who had a larger, differently-shaped Dewar kept at atmospheric pressure, from which we were able to pour our sample. - G.H.Ireland. In those days, BOC and Air products workers used to discharge full gas cylinders off the delvery truck by rolling them off, and on to a piece of coconut matting. We took the cylinders we rquired by polliing them by kicking them along. This prctice was stopped by Management when the stop valve was knocked off a cylinder. the rocket effect shot the cylinder out of the works and it is rumoured that a person was killed. igor _____________________________________________ Acorn RISC OS4 _____________________________________________ Perhaps larger liquid nitrogen storage dewars are pressurized to some degree, as you suggest ... I'm not familiar with them. Smaller lab dewars, up to a couple hundred liters capacity at least, are NOT usually pressurized to any great extent. Normally they are vented directly to the atmosphere, and are closed only when a little pressure build up is desired to force the LN out a transfer tube (usually into a smaller dewar or cryostat). The transfer tube extends to near the bottom of the storage dewar, and hence any pressure build up at the top of the dewar forces the liquid out the tube. When pressurized (usually briefly) the dewars are protected by safety valves to prevent excessive pressure build up. The insulation in the better grades of such dewars is quite remarkable, as a small dewar of perhaps 10 liters capacity (about the size of a milk can) will retain a usable quantity of LN (at atmospheric pressure) for a couple weeks. The sacrificial boil-off of a small part of the LN removes the heat leaking in, and keeps the remainder cold and in a liquid state. Typically, you might lose 5%-10% of the stock per day due to boil-off (depending on the dewar). COMPRESSED nitrogen cylinders are a whole different 'animal'. Dan Mitchell ============ |
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