The desire of humans to explore beyond low-Earth orbit has provided motivation for technology development to reliably confine gases. The new technologies have driven the need to accurately quantify the mass flow rate past gas pressure seals. While the classic method of helium leak detection is widely accepted and reliable, the method has weaknesses when applied to determining air leak rates. The newest advance in air leak rate quantification acts as an extension of the pressure decay method. In this enhanced method, the downstream pressure is controlled and a constant pressure differential is maintained across the seal under test. The effect of the enhancement is improved measurement uncertainty of the leak rate over the basic pressure decay method which may chase a valid measurement as the differential pressure changes with uncontrolled downstream pressure. Theoretically, each measurement system should produce the same value for a given leak rate; however, the measurement uncertainty is dependent upon the instruments used. As this enhanced method can be accomplished using off-the-shelf equipment and instrumentation, the measurement uncertainty strongly depends upon each unique test set-up. A parametric study of the leak rate uncertainty equation was completed, and the effect of changing the quality and quantity of the pressure and temperature measurement instruments was observed. The study quantified the differences in measurement uncertainty at different test conditions depending upon the instrument choices, as well as, the differences made in uncertainty by modifying the test conditions alone. The calculated measurement uncertainty was beneficially lower when using a single high-quality pressure measurement device when compared to utilizing multiple low-quality pressure transducers. Similar results were shown for temperature measurement devices. The data acquisition sampling rate, initial pressure, and mass flow rate also affected the uncertainty values in some cases, but may not be variable parameters.
Skip Nav Destination
ASME 2017 Fluids Engineering Division Summer Meeting
July 30–August 3, 2017
Waikoloa, Hawaii, USA
Conference Sponsors:
- Fluids Engineering Division
ISBN:
978-0-7918-5805-9
PROCEEDINGS PAPER
Leak Rate Uncertainty Parametric Study
John W. Magradey, Jr.,
John W. Magradey, Jr.
Clemson University, Clemson, SC
Search for other works by this author on:
Christopher C. Daniels,
Christopher C. Daniels
The University of Akron, Akron, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
Heather A. Oravec
Heather A. Oravec
The University of Akron, Akron, OH
Search for other works by this author on:
John W. Magradey, Jr.
Clemson University, Clemson, SC
Christopher C. Daniels
The University of Akron, Akron, OH
Heather A. Oravec
The University of Akron, Akron, OH
Paper No:
FEDSM2017-69075, V01BT06A003; 10 pages
Published Online:
October 24, 2017
Citation
Magradey, JW, Jr., Daniels, CC, & Oravec, HA. "Leak Rate Uncertainty Parametric Study." Proceedings of the ASME 2017 Fluids Engineering Division Summer Meeting. Volume 1B, Symposia: Fluid Measurement and Instrumentation; Fluid Dynamics of Wind Energy; Renewable and Sustainable Energy Conversion; Energy and Process Engineering; Microfluidics and Nanofluidics; Development and Applications in Computational Fluid Dynamics; DNS/LES and Hybrid RANS/LES Methods. Waikoloa, Hawaii, USA. July 30–August 3, 2017. V01BT06A003. ASME. https://doi.org/10.1115/FEDSM2017-69075
Download citation file:
14
Views
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Articles
Interaction of Rim Seal and Annulus Flows in an Axial Flow Turbine
J. Eng. Gas Turbines Power (October,2004)
Influence of Electrical Parameters of a Thin-Layer Sensor on the Accuracy of Pressure Measurement in an EHD Contact
J. Tribol (July,2011)
Profiles of Two JOMAE Associate Editors (A Continuing Series)
J. Offshore Mech. Arct. Eng (October,2021)
Related Chapters
The Special Characteristics of Closed-Cycle Gas Turbines
Closed-Cycle Gas Turbines: Operating Experience and Future Potential
Thermodynamic Performance
Closed-Cycle Gas Turbines: Operating Experience and Future Potential
Materials and Methods
Modified Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (mDFA)