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Dhuley, R. (2016). Gas Propagation in a Liquid Helium Cooled Vacuum Tube Following a Sudden Vacuum Loss. Retrieved from http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_2016SP_Dhuley_fsu_0071E_13054
This dissertation describes the propagation of near atmospheric nitrogen gas that rushes into a liquid helium cooled vacuum tube after the tube suddenly loses vacuum. The loss-of-vacuum scenario resembles accidental venting of atmospheric air to the beam-line of a superconducting radio frequency particle accelerator and is investigated to understand how in the presence of condensation, the in-flowing air will propagate in such geometry. In a series of controlled experiments, room temperature nitrogen gas (a substitute for air) at a variety of mass flow rates was vented to a high vacuum tube immersed in a bath of liquid helium. Pressure probes and thermometers installed on the tube along its length measured respectively the tube pressure and tube wall temperature rise due to gas flooding and condensation. At high mass in-flow rates a gas front propagated down the vacuum tube but with a continuously decreasing speed. Regression analysis of the measured front arrival times indicates that the speed decreases nearly exponentially with the travel length. At low enough mass in-flow rates, no front propagated in the vacuum tube. Instead, the in-flowing gas steadily condensed over a short section of the tube near its entrance and the front appeared to `freeze-out'. An analytical expression is derived for gas front propagation speed in a vacuum tube in the presence of condensation. The analytical model qualitatively explains the front deceleration and flow freeze-out. The model is then simplified and supplemented with condensation heat/mass transfer data to again find the front to decelerate exponentially while going away from the tube entrance. Within the experimental and procedural uncertainty, the exponential decay length-scales obtained from the front arrival time regression and from the simplified model agree.
A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Mechanical Engineering in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
Bibliography Note
Includes bibliographical references.
Advisory Committee
Steven W. Van Sciver, Professor Directing Dissertation; David A. Kopriva, University Representative; Eric E. Hellstrom, Committee Member; Wei Guo, Committee Member; Kunihiko Taira, Committee Member.
Publisher
Florida State University
Identifier
FSU_2016SP_Dhuley_fsu_0071E_13054
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Dhuley, R. (2016). Gas Propagation in a Liquid Helium Cooled Vacuum Tube Following a Sudden Vacuum Loss. Retrieved from http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_2016SP_Dhuley_fsu_0071E_13054