How Do Helium Leak Detectors Work?

  • Thread starter Thread starter tot
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Detectors Helium
AI Thread Summary
Helium leak detectors operate by detecting helium that leaks into a low-pressure enclosure, with helium propagating quickly due to its molecular properties. The speed of propagation is influenced by the vacuum level and the size of the leak, as well as the efficiency of the pumping system. Even small leaks can allow helium to diffuse rapidly, leading to quick detection despite the time it takes for the detector to react. Factors such as the enclosure size and the presence of insulating materials can affect the detection time. Overall, effective helium leak detection relies on a combination of vacuum quality and leak characteristics.
tot
Messages
43
Reaction score
0
I am trying to figure out how Helium Leak Detectors work.
If a leak detector is pumping on an enclosure that is at a low pressure, the detector will detect helium leaking into the system instantly as far as my human senses can tell.
The helium will propagate 4 meters in a time so small I can't even sense.
How is this possible?
There can't be very much airflow through the system because the leak is so small.

does helium propagate this quickly through air?
or is simply because the pressure is low in the enclosure?
why?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Leak detectors aren't that fast, it will take a few seconds for it to react even if you are pumping on a small enclosure and when trying to find a small leak (say 10^ 9 - 10 ^-8 m|barl/s) in a large enclosure it can easily take half a minute or more beforethe helium reaches the mass spectrometer in the leak detector.
 
from my experience I could not even notice any time.
Perhaps my enclosures are small in comparison to yours.
I would say perhaps 3 cubic meters on the inside of a 6 in pipe.
Does it propagate faster because of the vacuum?

Because it does not seem like the pumping would be making much of an air current due to the very small size of the leaks.
 
Last edited:
tot said:
from my experience I could not even notice any time.
Perhaps my enclosures are small in comparison to yours.
I would say perhaps 3 cubic meters on the inside of a 6 in pipe.
Does it propagate faster because of the vacuum?

Because it does not seem like the pumping would be making much of an air current due to the very small size of the leaks.

Of course it all depends. Depends on how good the vacuum is and how big the leak is and how efficient the pumping is etc. With a good vacuum system (corners tend to slow down pumping) and a sizeable leak you can have a pretty decent flow to the pump. But of course there is more to it than that. In a gas molecules are bouncing about with pretty decent velocity. So if you pull a good vacuum you can have pretty long mean free paths which means that the leak molecules also diffuse quite rapidly down the system even if the pump is not creating much of a pressure differential to "pump" them.
 
It also depends what's in the vacuum. If it's a cryogenic system with many layers of superinsulation it can take a lot longer for the helium to work it's way through.
 
Assume that this is a case where by sheer coincidence, two sources of coherent single-frequency EM wave pulses with equal duration are both fired in opposing directions, with both carrying the same frequency and amplitude and orientation. These two waves meet head-on while moving in opposing directions, and their phases are precisely offset by 180 degrees so that each trough of one wave meets with the crest of the other. This should be true for both the electric and magnetic components of...
Back
Top