vacuum fundamentals high-vacuum technology course week 7 paul nash he subject leader (engineering)

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Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

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Page 1: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

High-Vacuum Technology Course

Week 7

Paul Nash

HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Page 2: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

• Recap on last session

• Progress on assignments to date

Vacuum Technology

Page 3: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Joints and Seals‘O’ RingsMetal Seals

FeedthroughsElectricalThermocouples

Vacuum Fittings and Accessories

Page 4: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

ValvesManualPneumaticElectromagnetic

Vacuum Fittings and Accessories

Page 5: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

• System Design Considerations

Learning Objectives

Page 6: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

System Design Considerations

Page 7: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

The volume of a gas crossing a given point in a given period of time

This is referred to as ‘Pumping Speed’ and is normally measured in litres/second (l/s). Other units may also be encountered as below:

Volume Flow Rate

Page 8: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

By stating the flow in terms of pressure times volume flow rate, the variation in gas density with pressure is allowed for

This gives a flow unit that relates directly to the actual quantity of gas in the flow:

Throughput

time

volumepressureThroughput

Page 9: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Throughput varies with temperature and is generally specified at 20oC

The standard unit is the millibar litre per second (mbar l / s), but other units are also in use as below:

Throughput

Page 10: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• Resistance to gas flow of the components has an influence on pumping speed and ultimate pressure obtainable

• Every component in the system has a volume to be pumped and in addition gives some resistance to gas flow

Page 11: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• Components can include (in addition to the process chamber itself)– Valves– Gauge head fittings– Pipelines and fittings

• Each of these has a ‘Conductance’ and is generally in manufacturers data– This is the inverse of resistance

Page 12: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• The pumping speed at any point is:

• Where– Q is the Throughput (Torr l s-1 for example)– P is the Pressure at that point (Torr for example)– S is the Pumping Speed (l s-1 in this case)

P

QS

Page 13: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• So if gas flows through a pipe from a pressure P1 to a pressure P2 then the pumping speeds will be:

11P

QS

22

P

QS

Page 14: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• The Conductance between two points can be expressed as the quantity rate of flow divided by the pressure drop:

21 PP

QC

So – What are the units of Conductance?

Page 15: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• The Conductance between two points can also be expressed in terms of Pumping Speed:

2

1

1

11

SSC

Page 16: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• If a pump of Speed Sp is connected to a system through a pipe of Conductance C then then the effective Speed Sc is given by:

CS

CSS

P

Pc

Page 17: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• Conductance varies as the mode of flow changes

• Account must be taken of this when calculating conductance values

Page 18: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Page 19: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance of Pipelines

• Continuous flow:

• Molecular flow:

L

PDCc

45.136

L

DCm

31.12

Page 20: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance of Pipelines

• D = pipe bore in cm (assuming circular cross-section)

• P = average pressure in pipe in mbar • L = pipe length in cm• C = conductance in ls-1

• A graph can be used to estimate conductances

Page 21: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Page 22: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance of Fittings

• For fittings in series:

..........1111

321 CCCCTOTAL

Page 23: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance of Fittings

• For fittings in parallel:

..........321 CCCCTOTAL

Page 24: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• Effect of an orifice on pumping speed:

How much faster is pump B?

Page 25: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• Based on the equation we saw earlier: CS

CSS

P

Pc

121.116.11300

6.11300

lsSc

161.116.1130000

6.1130000

lsSc

Pump A

Pump B

Page 26: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Conductance

• Conductance varies dependant on:– Pressure region– Straight or bent pipe– Type of gas (molecular weight)– Temperature of gas– Length of pipe or fitting– Surface finish– Diameter

Page 27: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

System layout

Poor

Good

Page 28: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

Volume• The volume of the system is really the sum of

the parts – not just the chamber– Pipelines can have a significant impact– Some valves may have long flow paths– Extended tubulation should be avoided – remember

gauge head mounting?

Page 29: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

System layout

Page 30: Vacuum Fundamentals High-Vacuum Technology Course Week 7 Paul Nash HE Subject Leader (Engineering)

Vacuum Fundamentals

System layout