Inside a container with non-pure helium

In summary, helium is not miscible with the other gases in air, but it will mix partially if you add them all together.
  • #1
papernuke
36
0
Is helium miscible with O2, N2 or any of the other gases in air?
If a container were filled with 95% helium and 5% O2, would the O2 gas settle to the very bottom of the container, leaving very pure helium gas at the top?
 
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  • #2
The helium won't react with the O2 or N2. The helium would mostly settle to the top of the container, but I'm not sure about the purity. You'd probably get a small amount of O2 and N2 along with any sample you pulled out.
 
  • #3
papernuke said:
Is helium miscible with O2, N2 or any of the other gases in air?
If a container were filled with 95% helium and 5% O2, would the O2 gas settle to the very bottom of the container, leaving very pure helium gas at the top?


No, they would mix. Think of it this way, the Earth's atmospheric gases do not separate into layers according to relative weights of each gas.

You can remove the oxygen and nitrogen by reducing the temperature and liquefying them. It's a form of distillation.
 
  • #4
If you fill your room carefully, you can get unmixed gases for a while. But if you wait long enough (or have enough sources of turbulence), you will get a mixture of those gases, with slightly more helium at the top.
 
  • #5
krd said:
No, they would mix. Think of it this way, the Earth's atmospheric gases do not separate into layers according to relative weights of each gas.
You can remove the oxygen and nitrogen by reducing the temperature and liquefying them. It's a form of distillation.

Actually, the atmosphere is separated into layers according to the relative weights of gasses to some degree. Each layer of the atmosphere (mesosphere, stratosphere etc) has a different composition of gasses. One reason that there's a lot of gas that doesn't take its expected position in the atmosphere is because there are heavier molecules that the gas molecules can react with and attach themselves to. In the case of a container with only helium, nitrogen and oxygen, there are no reactions happening to form heavier molecules, so they should separate into layers. You can demonstrate the ability of fluids to separate into layers with some vegetable oil and water. Put them in a container and mix them together, and they'll separate again into layers, because the oil and water don't react well and they have different densities.
 
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  • #6
I'm not sure that is true? Ethanol and water have very different densities but they mix completely. Liquid mixing is totally different to gaseous mixing because of the intermolecular bonding in liquids.

I think the gases will partially stratify, but they will certainly not be ordered into perfect layers.
 
  • #7
MikeyW said:
I'm not sure that is true? Ethanol and water have very different densities but they mix completely. Liquid mixing is totally different to gaseous mixing because of the intermolecular bonding in liquids.
I think the gases will partially stratify, but they will certainly not be ordered into perfect layers.

Vegetable oil isn't ethanol, that's alcohol. I agree that the gases won't make perfect layers like the liquids do because they lack the intermolecular forces, but I can show you a demonstration that allows you to visualize a similar layered separation of gases.

http://youtu.be/ckaJs_u2U_A
This is quite a heavy gas, but the ratio of weight between the SF6 in that video, and air molecules is smaller than that between He, and O2, or He and N2. This suggests that the He would separate from the other gases in the container even better than the SF6 in this video separates from the air.
As for the O2 and N2 mixing or separating, they might be close enough in molecular weight that they don't separate well.
 
  • #8
The SF6 does not separate there, it gets injected at the bottom of the container as carefully as possible. If you watch the "sinking" around 3:50 carefully, you can see a boundary layer, where the SF6 concentration gradually increases towards the bottom. Filling more SF6 causes the boat to go down significantly, but only at 3:58 it is fully within the SF6 and sinks quickly.

The atmosphere has a height of >10km, do not expect the same layers in a small room.
 
  • #9
Nessdude14 said:
You can demonstrate the ability of fluids to separate into layers with some vegetable oil and water. Put them in a container and mix them together, and they'll separate again into layers, because the oil and water don't react well and they have different densities.

But gases don't behave as fluids. And you will find heavier molecules in the upper atmosphere.

Gases are more free to move around so they will mix. And there isn't much of anything in the upper atmosphere, all gases are densest near the ground.

I'm pretty sure thermal equilibrium would also cause the gases to mix.
 
  • #10
But when a volume of helium is released into the open, all of it is pushed up by the buoyancy of the surrounding air. And in that case, only helium rises, no oxygen or nitrogen mixes with the helium and rises with it.
Wouldn't the same happen in the smaller container? The 95% helium would be displaced upwards by the buoyant force by the 5% of oxygen in the tank.

And also, since helium rises only up to the point where it is no longer affected by the buoyant forces, does that mean that there is a slight layer of helium in the upper upper atmosphere? I don't think a helium atom would have acquired enough kinetic energy by then just from buoyant forces to have an escape kinetic energy.
 
  • #11
But when a volume of helium is released into the open, all of it is pushed up by the buoyancy of the surrounding air.
If you release it carefully, yes. If not, it mixes.

Helium atoms have a typical thermal velocity of maybe ~2km/s, and the escape velocity is ~11km/s. e^(-5.5) is still significant, therefore some helium atoms can escape.
 
  • #12
krd said:
But gases don't behave as fluids. And you will find heavier molecules in the upper atmosphere.
Gases are more free to move around so they will mix. And there isn't much of anything in the upper atmosphere, all gases are densest near the ground.
I'm pretty sure thermal equilibrium would also cause the gases to mix.

Gases do behave as fluids; Gases are fluids.
 
  • #13
Nessdude14 said:
Gases do behave as fluids; Gases are fluids.

Come on, you're really stretching it. They are two different states. They may have characteristics that overlap, but they are not the same thing.

My understanding of the states

Plasma: Highly energised particles explosively trying to escape in all directions. Like a gas, but simultaneously unlike a gas.

Gaseous: Energised particles with a great deal of free movement. They can exhibit pseudo-fluid characteristics, like the laminar flow of smoke from a cigarette. In the laminar flow, the particles can be considered to be weakly bound (they are not in fact bound) At lower temperatures/particle momentum, the molecules will become bound by Van der Waal forces and condense into liquid state.

Liquid: Lower energy/momentum particles. With freedom of movement, but held together by a stickiness of Van der Waal forces on some particles. (Some particles are stuck together others are free moving - the state is maintained by particles being bound and then knocked free from their bounds by other particles - the state is maintained as long as their is enough momentum in the particles to keep breaking the Van der Waal bonds - for the liquid to become a gas, the VdW bonds must be completely overwhelmed).

Colloid : A state between liquid and solid. Not exhibited by all materials. Custard is a colloid. Colloids have some of the characteristics of both solids and liquids, but not others.

Solid : Lowest energy. When the net Van der Waal forces in a liquid overcome the momentum of unbound particles, crystal nucleation of large groups of particles is allowed. If the crystallisation continues, particles are left with little freedom of movement - they are fixed in position and can only vibrate.

The thing is, all the states are just particles at different net energies - it's all the same thing, except it isn't. It's really how you want to define it. Deuterium Oxide and briny water will sink to the bottom of the ocean, but it does not mean you will not find salt and deuterium near the surface.
 
  • #14
papernuke said:
But when a volume of helium is released into the open, all of it is pushed up by the buoyancy of the surrounding air. And in that case, only helium rises, no oxygen or nitrogen mixes with the helium and rises with it.

No. think about what's happening on an atomic scale. When you release the helium and the atoms start to climb, they will collide with oxygen and nitrogen, giving them momentum to fly off. And even recoil downwards.

The reason a helium filled balloon is buoyant is due to the Archimedes principle. The net effect of the helium in the balloon is it's less dense then the air. You can treat the balloon as a single particle - the net effect of all the free air collisions on the outside of the balloon is to give it upwards momentum. If it was a heavier than air gas, the net effect would be to give the balloon a downward momentum.
 
  • #15
Nessdude14 said:
Gases do behave as fluids; Gases are fluids.

It's common for people to confuse the terms 'liquid' and 'fluid'. Another one that you frequently hear is when people talk of 'opaque glass' when they mean 'obscure glass'.

It 'literally' drives me mad! :eek:
 
  • #16
sophiecentaur said:
It's common for people to confuse the terms 'liquid' and 'fluid'. Another one that you frequently hear is when people talk of 'opaque glass' when they mean 'obscure glass'.

It 'literally' drives me mad! :eek:

You're better off not to confuse people. A gas can be a fluid because it flows. But when people say fluid they generally mean a liquid. Gases can have fluid characteristics but they are not liquids. But you could put that the other way, liquids share characteristics with gases - but that doesn't make them gases.

A colloid is a fluid. Because it can flow, but it is neither a solid, a liquid, nor a gas. Generally, referring to a colloid as a fluid, in context where the specific characteristics of the colloid are important, is incorrect - though it may be right in the literal sense, it's the wrong thing to do.

Plus, playing Gotcha! is just being a smart arse. No one calls a gas a fluid outside of specific context, unless they're playing Gotcha!.
 
  • #17
I take your point to some extent but PF is surely supposed to be more than just "people" and it's not the world of 'Pub Chat'. We are surely supposed to be discussing and explaining things in formal terms and trying to avoid confusion. When a word is used here, it should be in its properly defined sense or where would we be in discussing a topic like Electricity, for instance.

No one calls a gas a fluid outside of specific context, unless they're playing Gotcha!.
Archimedes' Principle refers to 'a fluid' and it works for hot air balloons as well as for boats. The "specific context" on PF is Physics. It isn't playing 'gotcha' here; it's spelling things out to avoid misconceptions and misunderstandings. I wouldn't pick holes in an instruction over a hospital bed which said "Check fluid intake" because we would all expect the patient to continue to breathe, unmonitored. That's a different world.
 
  • #18
The problem is people are blanketing two separate things under one definition, then using that definition to infer that the two things have the same characteristics. Gases and liquids act very differently- calling them fluids is only useful if you can remember that.
 
  • #19
MikeyW said:
The problem is people are blanketing two separate things under one definition, then using that definition to infer that the two things have the same characteristics. Gases and liquids act very differently- calling them fluids is only useful if you can remember that.

If "people" used the relevant terms then there would be no problem. I have just been pointing out that it is not just being 'posy' to ask for the right terms to be used.
 
  • #20
sophiecentaur said:
Archimedes' Principle refers to 'a fluid' and it works for hot air balloons as well as for boats.

Yes it does refer to fluid. But Archimedes would not have been aware of why it was happening. In the context of what is happening, the fluid characteristic is unimportant - the Archimedes principle will work in a gas or a liquid. Flow is not really something you have to think about - more the unbound nature of the particles in gases and liquids, gives a clearer idea. Flow would muddy the water.

Archimedes was aware that displacement of volume led to buoyancy. But he would have been unaware, that there is a connection with thermodynamics. Fluids and flow, were a real puzzle. Even in early classical thermodynamics, heat was thought of as a fluid.

Fluid behaviour can be deceptive. A flow - a laminar flow - can look so smooth from a distance. But if you get really close you can see it isn't. And it's the same with the chaotic swirls of turbulence - from a certain distance they look smooth - you get in really close and they're not. The really complicated nature of fluids emerges from something much simpler.
 
  • #21
You are just reinforcing my view that one needs to use the right terms in the right situation. A helium balloon would have been a better example, perhaps, but the thermodynamic aspect is hardly relevant to the density / displacement aspect of one fluid (air) supporting another fluid (hot air). There is no difference in principle between that and a bubble in water (another fluid)
 
  • #22
krd said:
You're better off not to confuse people. A gas can be a fluid because it flows. But when people say fluid they generally mean a liquid. Gases can have fluid characteristics but they are not liquids. But you could put that the other way, liquids share characteristics with gases - but that doesn't make them gases.

I agree that in every-day context, fluid usually means liquid, but you're on physics forums, and we're discussing physics. In this context, a gas is a fluid, and any decent physicist won't say otherwise.
 
  • #23
This thread is going off-topic. Please get back to the question posed by the OP.

Zz.
 
  • #24
sophiecentaur said:
A helium balloon would have been a better example, perhaps, but the thermodynamic aspect is hardly relevant to the density / displacement aspect of one fluid (air) supporting another fluid (hot air).

There is no difference in principle between that and a bubble in water (another fluid)

Think about it for a minute.

What is the force, driving a bubble in water upwards in water. It's obvious that the bubble is displacing water. What is the force.

You have to start thinking outside the bubble.

Which brings us in a commodius viscus of recirculation brings us back the helium in the room. At typical room temperature the helium will keep mixing with the other gases.

In sea water, or even in typical dead tap water in a glass, you'll find lots of dissolve oxygen - I bet you would find dissolved helium too.

Another really good example is fizzy drinks. Carbon dioxide is dissolved in sugar water. It will happily sit there - energise the drink by giving it a little tap, bubbles appear.

riverrun, past Eve and Adam's, from swerve of shore to bend of bay.
 
  • #25
I'm not sure what you want out of this. Is it to show that gases and liquids have nothing in common or to show that they have 'fluiditiy' in common? Both of the above are true.
 
  • #26
krd said:
You're better off not to confuse people. A gas can be a fluid because it flows. But when people say fluid they generally mean a liquid. Gases can have fluid characteristics but they are not liquids. But you could put that the other way, liquids share characteristics with gases - but that doesn't make them gases.

A colloid is a fluid. Because it can flow, but it is neither a solid, a liquid, nor a gas. Generally, referring to a colloid as a fluid, in context where the specific characteristics of the colloid are important, is incorrect - though it may be right in the literal sense, it's the wrong thing to do.

Plus, playing Gotcha! is just being a smart arse. No one calls a gas a fluid outside of specific context, unless they're playing Gotcha!.

As an aerospace engineer, who studied fluid mechanics extensively in graduate school (fluids was the focus of my masters degree), anyone who works with fluids frequently definitely considers a gas a fluid. Gases don't just "have fluid characteristics" - they are fluids. More specifically, they are compressible fluids, though in many cases, the compressibility can be neglected.

As for the original question? If released carefully, the gases may remain separate for a period, but they will eventually mix.
 

1. What is non-pure helium?

Non-pure helium is a gas mixture that contains a variety of other gases in addition to helium, such as nitrogen, oxygen, and hydrogen.

2. How does non-pure helium differ from pure helium?

Pure helium is a gas that is composed of only helium atoms, while non-pure helium is a mixture of helium and other gases, which can alter its properties and behavior.

3. What are the potential risks of being inside a container with non-pure helium?

The potential risks depend on the specific gases present in the non-pure helium mixture. Some gases may be toxic or flammable, while others may displace oxygen and lead to asphyxiation.

4. Can non-pure helium be used for scientific experiments?

Yes, non-pure helium can still be used for scientific experiments, but the results may be affected by the presence of other gases in the mixture. It is important to carefully consider and control for these variables.

5. How is non-pure helium produced?

Non-pure helium can be produced by extracting helium from natural gas sources, which also contain other gases. It can also be created through the process of fractional distillation, which separates gases based on their different boiling points.

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