Pressure questions filling smaller tank from larger

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The discussion focuses on the calculation of pressure changes when filling smaller tanks from a larger high-pressure tank. The initial tank (A) has a volume of 253.859 cubic inches and is filled to 4500 psi, while the smaller tanks (B) have a volume of 68 cubic inches. Participants clarify that the pressure drop after each fill is not simply based on volume but should consider the total volume after connection, applying Boyle's Law. The calculations show that after the first fill, the pressure in tank A drops to approximately 3541.782 psi gauge, assuming constant temperature. The conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding gas behavior during expansion and the correct application of gas laws for accurate pressure estimations.
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Ok I am wondering how to solve this or go about figuring it out. This is what I am trying to do.

I have a 253.859 cu inch tank (tank A) filled to 4500psi. I want to fill 68 cubic inch tanks (tanks B) with it. I know that after each fill tank A will decrease in pressure by a little amount and obviously tank B can only be filled to the same pressure as tank A since they would equal out. How can I go about this?

I know it is not as simple as tank A is ~3.7 times larger so it should fill 3.7 tanks
253.859/68=3.733

Could I do that after each fill it should lose 26.79% (1/3.733) of its pressure (since essentially 26.79% of volume is gone)?

Fill 1 3294.45 psi
Fill 2 2411.87 psi
Fill 3 1765.73 psi
Fill 4 1292.69 psi
Fill 5 946.34 psi
etc...
 
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I don't think you can go around this without using a compressor for filling the tanks with the required pressure.
 
i understand that but i want to try and figure out what each fill would be with no compressor. i know it won't make sense to do this in real life but now it is bugging me because it seems so simple so figure out the pressures yet i am not 100% sure if the math i am doing is right.
 
Jynx18 said:
i understand that but i want to try and figure out what each fill would be with no compressor. i know it won't make sense to do this in real life but now it is bugging me because it seems so simple so figure out the pressures yet i am not 100% sure if the math i am doing is right.

If the content of the high pressure tank is a condensed or partially condensed gas, you are lucky as the pressure doesn't drop as long as the some liquid has remained in the tank.

However if the the content is all gaseous, then we can easily calculate the pressure at after each filling. I think your calculation is wrong. I calculate it for the first filling ( I hope I am not wrong in my calculation!):

First suppose the empty tank is really empty ( vacuum) . After connecting the tanks, the content of changes volume from 253.859 to 253.859+68=321.589 . Hence the volume has increased by factor321.589/253.859= 1.268 . The pressure drops by the same factor. The initial pressure is 4500+15 pis ( I added the atmospheric pressure to get the absolute pressure). The absolute pressure after the first filling then becomes 4515/1.268 =3556.782 psi absolute ≈ 3541.782 psi gauge. Here I assumed that the temperature remains constant. ( of course the temperature tends to drop by expansion but in case of a metallic tank, the it gets energy from the ambient and the temperature remains the same as the ambient temperature.

If the empty tank is not vacuum but atmospheric pressure, the pressure would be slightly higher. If you need it, i can calculate it.
 
Jynx18 said:
(since essentially 26.79% of volume is gone)

This part is wrong. First, the volume is gone is not the right statement. Perhaps you mean 26.79 % of the mass ( moles) has gone. Again this is not correct. The mass expands into both tanks first, then 68/(253.859+68)=.211 ( 21.%) of it is gone.
 
Hassan2 said:
If the content of the high pressure tank is a condensed or partially condensed gas, you are lucky as the pressure doesn't drop as long as the some liquid has remained in the tank.

However if the the content is all gaseous, then we can easily calculate the pressure at after each filling. I think your calculation is wrong. I calculate it for the first filling ( I hope I am not wrong in my calculation!):

First suppose the empty tank is really empty ( vacuum) . After connecting the tanks, the content of changes volume from 253.859 to 253.859+68=321.589 . Hence the volume has increased by factor321.589/253.859= 1.268 . The pressure drops by the same factor. The initial pressure is 4500+15 pis ( I added the atmospheric pressure to get the absolute pressure). The absolute pressure after the first filling then becomes 4515/1.268 =3556.782 psi absolute ≈ 3541.782 psi gauge. Here I assumed that the temperature remains constant. ( of course the temperature tends to drop by expansion but in case of a metallic tank, the it gets energy from the ambient and the temperature remains the same as the ambient temperature.

If the empty tank is not vacuum but atmospheric pressure, the pressure would be slightly higher. If you need it, i can calculate it.

I should have mentioned it is compressed air so all gas. Wow I know boyles law but didn't think to look at it as the volume is increasing as it is connected during filling but was thinking it is "removed" since it is leaving one tank. That clears it up a bunch.

Hassan2 said:
This part is wrong. First, the volume is gone is not the right statement. Perhaps you mean 26.79 % of the mass ( moles) has gone. Again this is not correct. The mass expands into both tanks first, then 68/(253.859+68)=.211 ( 21.%) of it is gone.

Yea I knew the wording was wrong but that was the best I thought to describe it using intuition which usually causes problems as you can see. Like before I was looking in terms of air leaving the tank that's why I said removed incorrectly. Thanks for the help.
 
ok using p1v1=p2v2 i did this

p1 = 4500psi + 14.7 psi - 4514.7 psi
v1 = 253.859 ci
p2 = ?
v2 = 253.859 ci + 68 ci = 321.859 ci

so p2 = 3560.9 psi and that is 3546.2 psi guage.
 
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Yes, although that's assuming the temperature doesn't change. In reality, the temperature will drop as the gas is expanded, so the pressure will drop even farther than that (though the proportion of the gas transferred should still be the same).
 
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