Calculations Help: Working Out SF6 Usage in Litres

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To determine the amount of SF6 gas used in a 67.4-liter vessel filled to 6 bar, it's essential to consider the density of SF6 at the specified conditions. At 20 degrees Celsius and 6 bar gauge pressure, the density is approximately 46.5 kg/m³. Since the gas is superheated at these conditions, converting the volume of gas to liters directly is not straightforward. The discussion suggests that if the inquiry is about liquid SF6, the conditions of the liquid source need to be clarified to provide an accurate measurement. Understanding the difference between gas and liquid measurements is crucial for accurate reporting of SF6 usage.
Scara
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Hi Folks,

Not the best at this so hoping somebidy can help me.

I have a 67.4 litre vessel and I'm filling it with SF6 to 6Bar. Can I work out how much SF6 I'm using in litres?

Is this a dumb question? should nI be asking what weight I'm using.

I've been asked to supply usage in litres.
 
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Hi Scara. I can give you the density of SF6 if you can provide the temperature and verify the pressure is gage and not absolute pressure.
 
The sf 6 is at room temperature around 20deg Celsius . Pressure measured on vessel with gage.
 
At 6 barg and 20 C, density is roughly 46.5 kg/m3. The saturation temperature at this pressure is -19 C and at atmospheric pressure the saturation temperature is -68 C.

So at this pressure and temperature, you have a superheated gas. I'm not sure why or how you could put that into liters, but I wonder if there is a liquid source and you're being asked to determine how many liquid liters are needed for this 64.7 L vessel, in which case you need to define the conditions of the liquid source.
 
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