Richard L
28-11-2011, 11:30 PM
I have had many users voicing their concerns about the health hazard of a trunk mounted tank. So I did some research...
I arrived at this site:
http://www.ddbst.com/en/online/Online_Calc_vap_Form.php
Basically I was googling for the vapour pressure of water and methanol under various temperatures. I extracted two charts that may be of interest to many.
http://www.aquamist.co.uk/forum/water.gif http://www.aquamist.co.uk/forum/trdt.gif http://www.aquamist.co.uk/forum/methanol.gif
note: the pressure on the y-axis is absolute units
As indicated on the above charts, the saturated vapour pressure at 50 deg.C of water and methanol is ~1.5psi and ~7psi repectively. In a fully-closed tank, saturated vapour means the release of evapoarated vapour is equal to the condensed vapour. On a semi-vented tank at 50C at sea level, there is very little chance of methanol vapour releasing into the cabin.
I am no physicist, so is my assumption correct?
I arrived at this site:
http://www.ddbst.com/en/online/Online_Calc_vap_Form.php
Basically I was googling for the vapour pressure of water and methanol under various temperatures. I extracted two charts that may be of interest to many.
http://www.aquamist.co.uk/forum/water.gif http://www.aquamist.co.uk/forum/trdt.gif http://www.aquamist.co.uk/forum/methanol.gif
note: the pressure on the y-axis is absolute units
As indicated on the above charts, the saturated vapour pressure at 50 deg.C of water and methanol is ~1.5psi and ~7psi repectively. In a fully-closed tank, saturated vapour means the release of evapoarated vapour is equal to the condensed vapour. On a semi-vented tank at 50C at sea level, there is very little chance of methanol vapour releasing into the cabin.
I am no physicist, so is my assumption correct?