Vibration considerations for cryogenic tanks using glass bubbles insulation
Author(s) -
Rudy Werlink,
James E. Fesmire,
Jared Sass
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.4706905
Subject(s) - materials science , vibration , pipe insulation , composite material , shaker , cryogenics , glass microsphere , liquid hydrogen , thermal insulation , explosive material , fixture , vacuum insulated panel , mechanical engineering , engineering , hydrogen , acoustics , physics , layer (electronics) , chemistry , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , chemical engineering , microsphere
The use of glass bubbles as an efficient and practical thermal insulation system hasbeen previously demonstrated in cryogenic storage tanks. One such example is a spherical,vacuum-jacketed liquid hydrogen vessel of 218,000 liter capacity where the boiloff rate hasbeen reduced by approximately 50 percent. Further applications may include non-stationarytanks such as mobile tankers and tanks with extreme duty cycles or exposed to significantvibration environments. Space rocket launch events and mobile tanker life cycles representtwo harsh cases of mechanical vibration exposure. A number of bulk fill insulationmaterials including glass bubbles, perlite powders, and aerogel granules were tested forvibration effects and mechanical behavior using a custom design holding fixture subjectedto random vibration on an Electrodynamic Shaker. The settling effects for mixtures ofinsulation materials were also investigated. The vibration test results and granular particleanalysis are presented with considerations and implications for future cryogenic tankapplications.
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