Can a Small Canister Withstand He Gas Pressure?

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The discussion revolves around the ability of a small aluminum canister, approximately 150 ml in volume, to withstand helium gas pressure. Key factors influencing this include wall thickness, material strength, and engineering regulations, with aluminum scuba tanks typically handling around 200 bar pressure. The formula for maximum pressure in a cylinder is provided, emphasizing the importance of yield stress and safety factors. Additionally, the conversation touches on the theoretical implications of a canister that could withstand unlimited pressure, noting that gas liquefaction and solidification would eventually limit gas capacity. Overall, the design and safety considerations for gas canisters are crucial to prevent failure and ensure safe usage.
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This is a practical question. A balloon is to be filled with He gas. I know the volume of the balloon. That means I know the mass or number of moles of He gas that is needed. Question is, if a given small canister (volume ~ 150 ml) made out of aluminum can hold this gas. I am thinking of using P*V = n*R*T . Every quantity is know except P. So I can find a value for P.

How do I go about finding if this canister will withstand this pressure? What are the factors that need to be considered? I think the thickness of the wall, and the material the canister is made of are two factors. But are there any data available to exactly know if the given canister is right for this job?


Thanks.
 
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If this is a real question then probably no - the strength will depend on the engineering regulations in your country.
As a rough guide an aluminium scuba tank can hold about 200bar and is 11.8 – 15.5 mm wall thickness.
 
Is pressure in relation to the wall strength the only factor that I need to be worried about?

Another question I have regarding this issue is, IF, let's say, there exist a canister whose strength can stand unlimited pressures. Does this mean that I can get unlimited amount of gas in that hypothetical canister? My understanding is 'you can'. Only limiting factor would be the number of molecules (because they have finite size).
 
You may be interested in looking at Wikipedia's article on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoop_Stress" . The maximum pressure P for a cylinder can be estimated as

P=\frac{2t\sigma_y}{Fd}

where t is the wall thickness, \sigma_y the yield stress of the material, F a factor of safety, and d the diameter.

Nuha99 said:
Another question I have regarding this issue is, IF, let's say, there exist a canister whose strength can stand unlimited pressures. Does this mean that I can get unlimited amount of gas in that hypothetical canister? My understanding is 'you can'. Only limiting factor would be the number of molecules (because they have finite size).


Yes, although a complicating effect is the liquification and then solidification of the gas under increasing pressure.
 
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Nuha99 said:
Does this mean that I can get unlimited amount of gas in that hypothetical canister?
Upto the point that they form a neutron star - yes
 
Incidently, it's interesting to run the numbers mgb_phys gives. Assuming a steel yield stress of 200 MPa and diameter of 20 cm, the factor of safety would be over 1000! I'd speculate that gas cylinders may be overdesigned to avoid failure by fatigue (crack propagation over many loading cycles), which is a more insidious mechanism than simple yield. Plus there's a corrosion aspect, of course.
 
Thats for an Al tank ( yield stress of 6061-T6 is around 280Mpa) a steel tank is only about 4.0 - 5.0 mm thick.

The other stupid thing about scuba tanks is that you can't take them on aircraft (even empty - in case they have some residual pressure). So they are used at 200bar but the extra 0.3bar caused by the lower ambient pressure in the plane would make them explode. Leaving aside the -50deg temperature in the hold would actually give them a much lower pressure.
 
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