BenGreenhalgh
Mechanical
- Aug 21, 2024
- 5
Hi all - I am new here, so hope I have found the right place to ask this question. I'm a new engineer and work in a biocontainment facility, but I am confused by the gas storage system we employ. It works of course, but my understanding has a gap that I hope you could fill.
We store liquid CO2 and LN2 in large cryocontainers (uninsulated apparently). Assume the system is sealed, so that it's just the tank and the low temp liquids inside. My understanding was that the temperature over time within the tank would reach ambient temperature (say 20 degrees C), and the vapour pressure within the cylinder would reach the pressure at that temperature, so for CO2 at that temperature, it would be over 70 bar??
The tank is rated for 23 bar, so why does the tank never reach 70 bar? I am aware that by venting the gas for use in the labs, the pressure inside the tank reduces and more of the liquid evaporates (lowering the liquid temp), but say the labs were shutdown...what does the liquid /gas do with nothing being used?
Many thanks -
We store liquid CO2 and LN2 in large cryocontainers (uninsulated apparently). Assume the system is sealed, so that it's just the tank and the low temp liquids inside. My understanding was that the temperature over time within the tank would reach ambient temperature (say 20 degrees C), and the vapour pressure within the cylinder would reach the pressure at that temperature, so for CO2 at that temperature, it would be over 70 bar??
The tank is rated for 23 bar, so why does the tank never reach 70 bar? I am aware that by venting the gas for use in the labs, the pressure inside the tank reduces and more of the liquid evaporates (lowering the liquid temp), but say the labs were shutdown...what does the liquid /gas do with nothing being used?
Many thanks -