Hi folks,
I am still working on Nixie tubes, but I have to take it a little slow at the moment because I switched my university and I am currently sort of living in two cities ;-)
However, today I had some time so I took a look at my vacuum system. My problem was that even after I closed the valve to my pump at a pressure of 1.5E-2 mbar, the pressure would rise up to 20mbar in 20 minutes. So there was a leak.
I then checked every part of my system (swagelok adapter, needle valve) by replacing them with a blind flange and recording the pressure after 10s, 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, 120s, 300s, 600s, 1200s and plotted them. I realised that there was insufficient greasing on my needle valve, and the most interesting thing is that it is not airtight if the scale is adjusted to just zero. You have to (gently) adjust it below the scale zero point. Then I get a leakage rate of just 1.2 µbar/s which is very low.
My system has a volume of at most (!) 65ml, so the leakage rate now is Q = 5.4E-6 mbar l/s which is pretty good I think. See my results here:
http://www.jb-electronics.de/tmp/leakage.png
http://www.jb-electronics.de/tmp/leakage_extensive.png
Note that the Q value in these diagrams needs to be multiplied with 65ml.
The next step will be to find a good connection to the pressure reducer for my gas bottle. Right now I am using a PVC hose (terrible), and I have huge leakage rates.
But as always: One thing at a time ;-)
Jens
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On 01/25/2013 03:52 PM, jb-electronics wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I am still working on Nixie tubes, but I have to take it a little slow
> at the moment because I switched my university and I am currently sort
> of living in two cities ;-)
>
> However, today I had some time so I took a look at my vacuum system.
> My problem was that even after I closed the valve to my pump at a
> pressure of 1.5E-2 mbar, the pressure would rise up to 20mbar in 20
> minutes. So there was a leak.
>
> I then checked every part of my system (swagelok adapter, needle
> valve) by replacing them with a blind flange and recording the
> pressure after 10s, 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, 120s, 300s, 600s, 1200s
> and plotted them. I realised that there was insufficient greasing on
> my needle valve, and the most interesting thing is that it is not
> airtight if the scale is adjusted to just zero. You have to (gently)
> adjust it below the scale zero point. Then I get a leakage rate of
> just 1.2 琨ar/s which is very low.
>Very cool.
> My system has a volume of at most (!) 65ml, so the leakage rate now is
> Q = 5.4E-6 mbar l/s which is pretty good I think. See my results here:
>
> http://www.jb-electronics.de/tmp/leakage.png
> http://www.jb-electronics.de/tmp/leakage_extensive.png
>
> Note that the Q value in these diagrams needs to be multiplied with 65ml.
>
> The next step will be to find a good connection to the pressure
> reducer for my gas bottle. Right now I am using a PVC hose (terrible),
> and I have huge leakage rates.
>
> But as always: One thing at a time ;-)
>
> Jens
>
So the leakage rate seems pretty low, but I'd be concerned about the
total vacuum that your system can accomplish.
Although I have never built nixie tubes myself, I did a good amount of
research to go down that road.
My research came up with some claims that you need to get down in the
10E-6 torr before the fill for good results with a nixie tube.
Anyhow, please keep a image journal of your work. It looks like a great
deal of fun.
Michael-
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what do You think by the "insufficient greasing on my needle valve"? The rubber o-ring used to connect the valve to the system was not greased properly?
I think that the valve stem is not fully pressed to the valve seat when set to zero, when You screw it further below zero, it gets full contact with valve seat this making thight seal.
By the way, how long did You pump the system before closing and making the test?
What pressures are You going to achieve for pumping the nixies before filling by gas?
What valve do You use for isolating the system from vacuum pump (is it the ball valve we discussed recently)?
Hi folks,
I am still working on Nixie tubes, but I have to take it a little slow at the moment because I switched my university and I am currently sort of living in two cities ;-)
However, today I had some time so I took a look at my vacuum system. My problem was that even after I closed the valve to my pump at a pressure of 1.5E-2 mbar, the pressure would rise up to 20mbar in 20 minutes. So there was a leak.
I then checked every part of my system (swagelok adapter, needle valve) by replacing them with a blind flange and recording the pressure after 10s, 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, 120s, 300s, 600s, 1200s and plotted them. I realised that there was insufficient greasing on my needle valve, and the most interesting thing is that it is not airtight if the scale is adjusted to just zero. You have to (gently) adjust it below the scale zero point. Then I get a leakage rate of just 1.2 µbar/s which is very low.
My system has a volume of at most (!) 65ml, so the leakage rate now is Q = 5.4E-6 mbar l/s which is pretty good I think. See my results here:
http://www.jb-electronics.de/tmp/leakage.png
http://www.jb-electronics.de/tmp/leakage_extensive.png
Note that the Q value in these diagrams needs to be multiplied with 65ml.
The next step will be to find a good connection to the pressure reducer for my gas bottle. Right now I am using a PVC hose (terrible), and I have huge leakage rates.
But as always: One thing at a time ;-)
Jens
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> the numbers for nixi tubes is one of the problem I havent sufficiently solved yet. Are your laser cutters able to produce numbers that have 0.4mm wide lines? The material would be 0.1mm thick stainless steel sheet (316L).I had been planning to photoetch mine, but a laser cutter should be able to do a good job. It would also probably be possible with a water jet cutter, but I don't think any of our members have access to one.
- John
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John S
Thats it! I was looking for tiny beads several times, but havent found sich a small ones. The height is important, 1.8mm is exactly what is inside z566m!
I got a quote from a german company for ceramic washers, over 2 eur per piece :-)
Thanks,
Dalibor Farný
http://dalibor.farny.cz
sent from Samsung Galaxy Pad
On 01/30/2013 11:18 AM, Grahame Marsh wrote:
> On 30/01/2013 09:58, Sebastian Götte wrote:
>> On 01/30/2013 03:44 AM, Charles MacDonald wrote:
>>> As far as the spacers, those could be molded in Ceramic Clay and fired
>>> in a Kiln. The mold could be made in Silicon or similar, again the
>>> prototype could be made on a 3D printer, or just turned on a lathe.
>> There are very small (1...2mm estimated) glass beads that are used for
>> art and such, they can be bought in art supplies shops.
> Perhaps - 5mm dia 5mm long and stackable
> http://uk.farnell.com/multicomp/cb3/spacer-ceramic-stand-off-pk50/dp/8919275
If I understand this site right, those are 1.8mm long:
http://www.artbeads.com/sb18-0131.html