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Making Liquid Methane (and blowing up my Cryocooler)

Hyperspace Pirate 140,000 9 months ago
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To try everything Brilliant has to offer for free for a full 30 days, visit https://brilliant.org/HyperspacePirate/ . You'll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription. In this video I'm going to Liquify Methane / Natural gas with my Mixed-Gas Joule-Thomson Cryocooler. Methane liquifies at -162C under ambient pressure, but at elevated pressures, it can be condensed as high as -85C. In this experiment I'll condense some at -118C / 12 bar of pressure. My cryocooler was meant for making liquid air or liquid nitrogen, but I figured I'd try liquefying some methane along the way to see if there's any pitfalls / issues with making liquefied natural gas (LNG), which there definitely were. The joule-thomson cycle works by compressing gas and then expanding it, which forces it to drop its temperature. By back-flowing the cold low pressure gas back over the high pressure gas in a counterflow heat exchanger, the cryocooler creates a positive feedback loop that drives the temperature down into the cryogenic range. The lowest temperature I recorded was -180C. Using pure methane or pure nitrogen would require hundreds of atmospheres of pressure in the cycle to reach the desired temperature, but by using a mixture of gases with different boiling points (similar to an "autocascade" refrigeration system), the same effect can be achieved at just 20-30 bar which a repurposed air conditioner compressor can handle without any problem. For liquefying Methane, a gas mix of Propane, Ethylene, Methane, Argon and Nitrogen is used. The same components are used for liquefying Nitrogen, but in different proportions to optimize heat lift at lower temperatures. If you want to learn more about the joule-thomson refrigeration cycle, check out my previous videos on the subject: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_B0RmRlFHA https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7uQ3YW3_3eA Liquid Methane / LNG is becoming used more frequently both for power generation and vehicles because it has an energy density similar to gasoline/diesel/kerosene, but is extremely easy to ignite/burn and burns very clean. In the near future, hardware will be delivered to the moon via LNG-burning rockets (starship). At the hobby level, I don't see much use for it, but it's a fun science experiment since this is technically the first cryogenic liquid I've produced. Music Used: Mining by Moonlight - Kevin MacLeod Backbay Lounge - Kevin MacLeod Apero Hour - Kevin MacLeod George Street Shuffle - Kevin MacLeod

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