WarthogARJ
Established Member
Hi,I would look at diving cylinders as, if you can buddy up with a testing shop they will tell you when they have cylinders that fail the inspection & if you guarantee that they will only ever be used at 150bar or under you may be able to buy them. You will be limited to 11 litre tanks but maybe able to get them at a reasonable price.
In fact there are a couple of 15 litre tanks on eBay that are out of test selling for £20 & £22. Ideally you would get them tested, that would give you a 5 year, in test, lifetime with the likelihood of them retesting again.
Yeah, I was looking at a range of tanks: not all the following are GOOD options though, I'm just showing the possibilities:
(1) Scuba tanks: aluminium or steel
(2) Conventional gas cylinders; Nitrogen, oxygen, argon, air
(3) Fire extinguisher bodies:
(4) Propane gas cylinders:
I'm a Materials Engineer (started as Chemical Engineer), and have been involved in a wide range of industrial environments, many of which use pressure vessels. For instance, at age 22 in 1982 I was offshore as a Field Engineer, working with well head pressures in excess of 10k psi at times (H2S and CO2 as well).
For this, I would follow the general provisos of the relevant ASME Codes: for pressure vessels. And I think it would be a "Bad Idea" to use any pressure vessel that the scuba guys failed. Well, I suppose it would depend WHY they failed it, but their inspection/hydro test is pretty basic.
You do not want anything that is pressurised with ANY gas to suddenly decide to unzip itself. A liquid is a different story, but not compressed gas.
One issue is a compress air system tank is being continually pressurised, and then depressurised. Maybe not drained to zero very often, but it sees a lot of cyclical pressure. Whereas a scuba tank, or most of the other examples see very few pressure cycles. This will affect possible failure due to fatigue.
I would approach the Design of a Receiver Tank as follows:
(1) Determine my Design Pressure and Volume: maybe a range, going from high to low
(2) See what existing vessels are in that range, and what applications they are intended for.
As well as their materials, and dimensions.
(3) Unless the vessel was intended for an air compressor, you'd need to redo the design calcs for it.
And look at safety margins, material toughness, ability to inspect it for flaws etc etc, and to test it
It needs to be designed as "leak before break".
(4) Anything I used, I would only use iof after a full inspection.
Do something at least as demanding as a scuba tank test (hydro test, and visual inspection of internals). And I'd hydro test it to a LOT higher pressure than my Design Pressure: in effect, Proof Test it.
I might well get it X-rayed: that's not very expensive.
(5) Materials: I would try NOT to use aluminium. Nothing wrong with it, but for this purpose, unlike a scuba tank, you don't need the low weight.
And a good pressure vessel's steel COULD and SHOULD be a LOT tougher.
(6) Look at what safety valves, connections and pressure gauges are needed
This might sound $$$, but if you can do the design yourself, it's not.
Notes:
Scuba Tanks: if you rule out aluminium, then just steel tanks narrow your potential down a lot.
And they are pretty small.
Gas Cylinders: these are made to be banged around, are good quality/tough steel, and are well inspected/QC'd at manufacture, as well as regularily afterwards.
And they are BIG suckers: 50 litres water volume up to 200 litres.
They are hard to BUY though, most companies only want to RENT them.
One way would be to get it from a company that does a deposit, and no rent.
A full N2 cylinder costs you £135 then (deposit that you don't get back if you keep it).
The gas costs you £55, so you want to have someone else use that first.
See the attached graph, where I used prices from a big UK supplier of auxillary tanks. And i put on the point for a Nitrogen 50 litre cylinder (rated at 200 Bar). It's a LOT better. I'm expressing volume in cubic meters at room conditions (1 Bar).
The off-the -shelf tanks are BIG, but not very high pressure (10 - 11 Bar).
You would need to add a little bit for a relief valve, and a few connectors. And be clever about how you dealt with water draining. Maybe put the cylinder upside down, with a 4 way-T piece. Drain ater from the middle one, and have a gauge on one, and the outlet/intel on the other.
(3) Propane Tanks, and Fire Extinguishers:
I've not looked at how these are designed/made.
Perhaps they could be suiktable.
But I think too thin a wall thickness.
And not high enough pressures.
You want to get to 200 Bar I think.
I'm not saying this is the BEST solution, but it shows the idea is interesting to pursue.
Last edited: