How cheaply could you DIY a high-vacuum pump...

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Mac Cowell

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Jun 23, 2016, 5:15:24 AM6/23/16
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Thought experiment: what is the lower bound on the cost of making a DIY high-vaccum pump, say with a budget around $500?

Let's define "High vacuum" as 100 mPa - 0.05 mPa.

Jürgen Gross provides a good introduction to the vacuum ranges and requisite pumps used to create them for Mass Spec in "Mass Spectrometry: Ch4 Instrumentation" (Springer, libgen).

In "Working in a Vacuum" (The Amateur Scientist. Sept 1996. Scientific American), Shawn Carlson described the construction of DIY sorption pump that was surely less than $500 in materials and could reach ~1.33 Pa (still a couple of orders of magnitude away from High vac):

"For many applications, sorption pumps are the vehicles of choice for creating a good vacuum. They have no moving parts; instead they work by chilling a type of substance, called a sorbent, to a temperature at which it absorbs gases. Activated charcoal works, but a molecular sieve is better. Molecular sieves are little pellets with so many microscopic nooks and crannies that they have fantastically large surface areas; a one-gram pellet may have more than 1,000 square meters of surface.

When chilled, air molecules get caught in these microchasms. A 50-gram supply can pump a one-liter volume down to 10 millitorr in 20 minutes. (Atmospheric pressure is about 760 torr.) Half a gallon of molecular sieve from Duniway Stockroom sells for about $35."

In the chapter "A Homemade Atom Smasher" (pdf) in "The Scientific American Book of Projects for the Amateur Scientists" (libgen), Clair Stong describes a DIY high-vacuum system based on salvaged refrigerator pumps and a home-made mercury (!) diffusion pump that can reach around 2 mPa. It is unclear how much the entire setup cost but Stong implies that it was around $50-100 in 1960, or $400-800 today.

Lastly, Stephen Hansen hosts a lot of information on DIY vacuum systems at belljar.net. Of particular note is a pdf of correspondence he shared with Frank Lee on Homemade Oil Diffusion Pumps. The file includes a basic design Lee reckons could have been machined in 1965 for $10 (~$80 today) that would reach 5x10^-6 torr, or 0.666 mPa.

Oh, and he also hosts a short article that might be of interest to some: "Home Built Mass Spectrometers - the Development of a Simple Quadrupole Gas Analyzer" (Carl Helber. The Bell Jar Vol.6 No.2 Spring 1997)

I'm curious to know if anyone has more elegant solutions for high vacuum systems.

Mac

Simon Quellen Field

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Jun 23, 2016, 7:52:43 PM6/23/16
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August Pamplona

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Jul 12, 2016, 3:58:52 PM7/12/16
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        Would the above be relevant? 

August

Nathan McCorkle

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Jul 12, 2016, 5:55:22 PM7/12/16
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>
> https://hackaday.io/project/8171-everymans-turbomolecular-pump
> Would the above be relevant?
>
> August


Also, on fusor.net there are many discussions and plans/schematics for
turbo pump controllers, so you can buy a used pump (those lacking
controllers are usually much cheaper, as little as $100 or $200)

i.e.
http://www.fusor.net/board/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=4036&start=30
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