Acetylene Storage: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Added some more links under the “Internal Links” section) |
(Added some more links under the “External Links” section) |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
*[[Gas Cylinder]] | *[[Gas Cylinder]] | ||
*[[Open Source Acetylene Generator]] | *[[Open Source Acetylene Generator]] | ||
**An alternative to Acetylene Cylinders that uses [[Calcium | **An alternative to Acetylene Cylinders that uses [[Calcium Carbide]] and [[Water]] akin to a scaled up [[Carbide Lamp]] | ||
Carbide]] and [[Water]] akin to a scaled up [[Carbide Lamp]] | |||
=External Links= | =External Links= | ||
* | *[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acetylene#Storage_and_handling The Section of the Wikipedia Page on Acetylene on Storage and Handling] | ||
[[Category: Bio-Petrochemistry]] [[Category: Safety]] [[Category: Storage]] [[Category: Welding]] | [[Category: Bio-Petrochemistry]] [[Category: Safety]] [[Category: Storage]] [[Category: Welding]] |
Latest revision as of 15:23, 23 September 2025
Basics
- Acetylene is quite an unstable gas, and thus cannot be compressed and stored by conventional means in a NORMAL Gas Cylinder
- Thus it is typically dissolved in Acetone and suspended in some sort of matrix (Most Modern Acetylene Gas Cylinders use a Polyurethane Foam although historic formulations utilized Diatomaceous Earth and/or Asbestos etc
- This leads to special operation, safety, and Cylinder Disposal/Recycling Concerns, which this page aims to outline
Internal Links
- Acetylene
- Gas Cylinder
- Open Source Acetylene Generator
- An alternative to Acetylene Cylinders that uses Calcium Carbide and Water akin to a scaled up Carbide Lamp