CH4 or H2 diffusion through schedule 40 PVC pipe
[ Forum ]
Posted by Charles
Barker on May
14, 2004 at
18:40:59:
In studies of methane content in coalbeds, a fresh gas bearing coal sample is
put in a water-filled pressure tight container of made of 5 mm thick schedule
40 PVC pipe. Another method is to put the same type of coal sample in a
water-filled container made of 5 mm wall thickness aluminum pipe. the desorbed
CH4 or H2 accumulates in a small headspace volume above the water fill. volume
measuremenets are at first made every few minutes, but after gas content and
pressure declines, the measurements are made daily. Hence gas pressure inside
the sample container is not allowed to rise much. Typically the initial
pressure inside the cylinder <5psi (35KPa) above ambient atmospheric pressure. The desorbed gas volume measurements can go on for days to months depending on the physical diffusion/desorption character of the coal sample. Typically the pressure of the desorbed gas constantly declines and the experiment ceases when the internal pressure equals atmospheric. >
Those
workers that use PVC have been attacked because of conjectured diffusion of methane and hydrogen through the schedule 40 pipe versus the supposed rates of diffusion
through aluminum pipe. Does anyone have an grasp on how diffusion of CH4 or H2
in PVC pipe would effect these measurements?
Follow Ups: