Periodic motions and chaos for a damped mobile piston system in a high pressure gas cylinder with P control

2017 ◽  
Vol 95 ◽  
pp. 168-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donghua Wang ◽  
Jianzhe Huang
2013 ◽  
Vol 546 ◽  
pp. 84-88
Author(s):  
Qiu Juan Lv ◽  
Min Chen ◽  
Yan Jiao Li ◽  
Zhi Qing Guo ◽  
Chang Jiang Liu

Conducting tensile experiment with high pressure gas cylinder materials to analyze its acoustic emission (AE) signals, can realize the stretch features and AE signals regularity, which is very important to distinguish high pressure gas cylinder detection. The AE signals are divided into four different stages through the tensile experiment, which show that AE signals and theory analysis are fitted well and thus be used to distinguish materials defects.


2015 ◽  
Vol 757 ◽  
pp. 45-49
Author(s):  
Qiu Juan Lv ◽  
Xiu Yu Li ◽  
Chang Jiang Liu ◽  
Zhi Qing Guo ◽  
Yan Jiao Li

The gas cylinder is used in most cases, which is often made from alloy structural steel. When it is used in high pressure gas cylinder, the larger volume, higher weight, and larger length will produce. It is found that both in theoretical and experimental analysis that this kind of material has syntactical mechanical properties such as the tension strength and plastic strength, so it can be reused many times.


1987 ◽  
Vol 109 (4) ◽  
pp. 435-439 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Rana

This paper deals with a determination of the fracture toughness requirement to obtain leak-before-break performance for a 155–175 ksi strength level high-pressure gas cylinder. Analytical LEFM methods along with Irwin’s KIc-Kc equation related by the parameter βIc were used to predict the fracture toughness requirement for the plane-stress fracture state problem. Experimental work was conducted on flawed cylinders to quantify the fracture toughness requirement for leak-before-break performance. The results indicated that the analytically predicted toughness requirement is 4 to 25 percent higher than that established experimentally. The results also indicated that the minimum specified KIc(J) value of 85 ksi in. (93.5 MPam) for the gas cylinder is sufficiently higher than the analytically and experimentally established toughness values to provide the desired leak-before-break performance.


2018 ◽  
Vol 122 (1252) ◽  
pp. 869-888 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sascha Kaiser ◽  
Markus Nickl ◽  
Christina Salpingidou ◽  
Zinon Vlahostergios ◽  
Stefan Donnerhack ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe synergistic combination of two promising engine architectures for future aero engines is presented. The first is the Composite Cycle Engine, which introduces a piston system in the high pressure part of the core engine, to utilise closed volume combustion and high temperature capability due to instationary operation. The second is the Intercooled Recuperated engine that employs recuperators to utilise waste heat from the core engine exhaust and intercooler to improve temperature levels for recuperation and to reduce compression work. Combinations of both architectures are presented and investigated for improvement potential with respect to specific fuel consumption, engine weight and fuel burn against a turbofan. The Composite Cycle alone provides a 15.6% fuel burn reduction against a turbofan. Options for adding intercooler were screened, and a benefit of up to 1.9% fuel burn could be shown for installation in front of a piston system through a significant, efficiency-neutral weight decrease. Waste heat can be utilised by means of classic recuperation to the entire core mass flow before the combustor, or alternatively on the turbine cooling bleed or a piston engine bypass flow that is mixed again with the main flow before the combustor. As further permutation, waste heat can be recovered either after the low pressure turbine – with or without sequential combustion – or between the high pressure and low pressure turbine. Waste heat recovery after the low pressure turbine was found to be not easily feasible or tied to high fuel burn penalties due to unfavourable temperature levels, even when using sequential combustion or intercooling. Feasible temperature levels could be obtained with inter-turbine waste heat recovery but always resulted in at least 0.3% higher fuel burn compared to the non-recuperated baseline under the given assumptions. Consequently, only the application of an intercooler appears to provide a considerable benefit for the examined thermodynamic conditions in the low fidelity analyses of various engine architecture combinations with the specific heat exchanger design. Since the obtained drawbacks of some waste heat utilisation concepts are small, innovative waste heat management concepts coupled with the further extension of the design space and the inclusion of higher fidelity models may achieve a benefit and motivate future investigations.


Author(s):  
Toshio Ogata

A simple testing method to evaluate the influence of high pressure hydrogen gas up to 100 MPa on mechanical properties at the temperature between 20 K and up to 800 K had been developed. In this method, instead of using high-pressure gas vessels, high pressure gas was filled into a small hole in the hollow-type test piece from a hydrogen gas cylinder or a compressor for 10 MPa or 100 MPa test. A small inner diameter of the hole enables to evaluate also the reduction of area in the slow strain-rate tensile (SSRT) tests. The temperature of the test piece with the high pressure gas can be changed simply by surrounding coolant or heater between 20 K and 800 K. Lots of test results by this method proved that almost the same results were obtained between this method and the conventional method with high-pressure gas vessels where test piece is installed. The great advantages of this method are not only the less cost for the facilities of high-pressure vessels but also the ability of tests at lower or higher temperatures than those with the vessels. So, this method is proposed to be used world-widely to evaluate the mechanical properties of structural materials for extremely severe environments, such as high-pressure hydrogen applications and also to study the mechanism of the influence of high-pressure hydrogen for design and reliability of those facilities. In this paper, the details of testing procedure of this method and results of tensile and fatigue tests in up to 70 MPa hydrogen gas on several kinds of stainless steels obtained by this method are presented.


2013 ◽  
Vol 631-632 ◽  
pp. 846-851
Author(s):  
Wen Wei Li ◽  
Qing Du ◽  
Gang Di ◽  
Rui Xin Wang

The course and phenomena of oxygen cylinder explosion are introduced. Chemical composition analysis, mechanical properties, metallographic tests and spectrum analysis of the cylinder fragments have been carried out. Based on the fact that the explosion is concluded as a chemical explosion because of grease. Filling grease into oxygen cylinder was due to misuse. Violent oxidation exothermic reaction occurred when grease was exposed to pure high-pressure oxygen. The instantaneous releasing of heat produced extreme high temperature and extreme high pressure in the cylinder, which exceeded its limits and caused burst. During the process for risk, pressure gauge shows that cylinder explosion occurred while oxygen cylinder is charged to 13.5MPa. According to the GB 5099, the minimum explosion pressure of oxygen cylinder is 43.8MPa. Moreover, inverse calculation shows that minimum grease amount leading to burst of cylinder is between 79.6g to 95.5g. The experiences and lessons for the management and use of gas cylinder are discussed and emphasized.


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