Airou
- 5
- 0
Hi guys,
Here's an interesting problem for you. I'm trying to understand what happens to the temperature of air cylinders as the compressed air within is rapidly expanded to see if the surface in contact with the expanding air gets so cold it passes through the ductile to brittle transition temperature.
I can use Refprop and iteration to work out the temperatures and pressures adiabatically, but what I am struggling with is figuring out the heat flow into the rapidly cooling air from the surroundings through the wall of the cylinder.
For the external skin of the cylinder (in contact with ambient, room temperature air) I have assumed an air-to-surface thermal resistance of 0.123 m^2K/W used as a rule of thumb in the construction industy for internal wall surfaces in calculating heat losses in buildings, but I have no idea what the surface-to-air resistance would be from the steel to compressed air and how that figure changes with pressure and temperature.
Any thoughts/pointers to where I can find that info would be greatly appreciated.
Here's an interesting problem for you. I'm trying to understand what happens to the temperature of air cylinders as the compressed air within is rapidly expanded to see if the surface in contact with the expanding air gets so cold it passes through the ductile to brittle transition temperature.
I can use Refprop and iteration to work out the temperatures and pressures adiabatically, but what I am struggling with is figuring out the heat flow into the rapidly cooling air from the surroundings through the wall of the cylinder.
For the external skin of the cylinder (in contact with ambient, room temperature air) I have assumed an air-to-surface thermal resistance of 0.123 m^2K/W used as a rule of thumb in the construction industy for internal wall surfaces in calculating heat losses in buildings, but I have no idea what the surface-to-air resistance would be from the steel to compressed air and how that figure changes with pressure and temperature.
Any thoughts/pointers to where I can find that info would be greatly appreciated.