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Helium Dispersion in an Attached Single-Car Residential Garage with and Without Vehicle (Paperback)
Loot Price: R389
Discovery Miles 3 890
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Helium Dispersion in an Attached Single-Car Residential Garage with and Without Vehicle (Paperback)
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Loot Price R389
Discovery Miles 3 890
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The dispersion and loss of helium inside a single-car residential
garage attached to a single-family house was experimentally
characterized by recording time-resolved helium concentrations at
multiple locations in the garage and at a single location in the
house during and following helium releases near the floor of the
garage. Helium served as a surrogate for hydrogen for safety
reasons, and helium release rates were adjusted to provide the same
constant volume flow rate as that required to release 5 kg of
hydrogen over a four hour period. Supporting measurements included
compartment leakage, temperature, and atmospheric wind conditions.
Helium was released upwards either as momentum- or
buoyancydominated flows. Experiments were performed with the garage
empty or with one of two conventional mid-sized automobiles parked
over the release location. Six tests with the garage naturally
ventilated and six tests employing forced ventilation with a fan
are described. A variety of parameters were used to characterize
the mixing behavior. Conclusions emphasized include: a) the role of
Froude number on helium mixing behavior, b) the development of
upper and lower helium concentration layers in the garage during a
release, c) the measurable, but limited, effects of atmospheric
wind on the results, d) the relatively efficient transfer of helium
from the garage into the house during the releases, e) the ability
of a vehicle to trap a high helium concentration in the engine
compartment and, particularly, the undercarriage during a helium
release and the relatively rapid drop in these levels to those of
the surrounding garage at the end of the release, f) the relatively
slow buildup of helium in the passenger compartment and trunk of a
vehicle during a helium release and subsequent slow decay following
cessation of the flow, g) the effectiveness of active ventilation
in reducing helium concentrations in the garage to levels below
those corresponding to flammable concentrations of hydrogen, and h)
the trapping of helium/air mixtures corresponding to highly
flammable hydrogen mixtures inside the vehicles even when active
garage ventilation was employed.
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