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On Sun, 17 Feb 2008 21:04:37 GMT, Jerry <jerry@b.com> wrote:
Chromatography pump used in chemical compound analysis. A pump with a
sapphire/ruby piston supplies milliliters per hour at pressures from
1-10K PSI. Sits on a table and occupies a half cubic foot or less.
Just a little flow, at high pressure, through 1/16" SS tubing with a
..02" bore . . .
You are thinking in pounds per square inch and imagining lots of those
square inches - when the tubing is very small even plastic will work.
Not scary at all. It fails and the usual symptom is a dribble of
liquid. Liquid under pressure is actually a lot nicer than steam or
gas when it fails (as a general rule - there are exceptions).
My first guess was HPLC when he said stepper and pressure . . .
Chemists are always looking for a pump that won't cause pressure
pulses. One way is to just load a large thick cylinder with liquid
(lots of square inches) and just slowly squeeze it out at a ml/hr rate
- no pulses since there's only one stroke of the pump.
--
Not necessarily. There's something called High Performance Liquiddo you really mean 400kg/cm? that's about 5500psi. That's scary pressure.
This must be a massive structure.
Chromatography pump used in chemical compound analysis. A pump with a
sapphire/ruby piston supplies milliliters per hour at pressures from
1-10K PSI. Sits on a table and occupies a half cubic foot or less.
Just a little flow, at high pressure, through 1/16" SS tubing with a
..02" bore . . .
You are thinking in pounds per square inch and imagining lots of those
square inches - when the tubing is very small even plastic will work.
Not scary at all. It fails and the usual symptom is a dribble of
liquid. Liquid under pressure is actually a lot nicer than steam or
gas when it fails (as a general rule - there are exceptions).
My first guess was HPLC when he said stepper and pressure . . .
Chemists are always looking for a pump that won't cause pressure
pulses. One way is to just load a large thick cylinder with liquid
(lots of square inches) and just slowly squeeze it out at a ml/hr rate
- no pulses since there's only one stroke of the pump.
--