Hi,
I have a CO
2 extinguisher. The volume of the container is 6.7 dm
3, the mass of the extinguisher casing is 8 kg, and the mass of the CO
2 inside is 4.7 kg. I contacted the distributor and asked for information, they stated that the internal pressure at 20°C is 55 bar and the CO
2 eject time is 20 seconds. I really don't get how this works. I tried calculating the internal pressure using mass, volume and temperature information but get results around 200 bar (3 times the actual pressure!!!). I'm missing something big and simply don't know what. As I understand, the CO
2 inside the tank is a gas because the temperature is not low enough as well as the pressure not being high enough for it to be a liquid. I realize CO
2 doesn't behave as an ideal gas, but I have taken that into consideration, it's compression factor at ≈ 50 bar and 300 K is ≈ 0.6. How can I calculate the thrust of the gas being expelled? I hope someone out there has some experience with fire extinguishers, or is this the wrong forum for this sort of question
P*V = 0.6*n*R*T
P = 0.6*(m/M)*R*T/V
P = 0.6*(4700 g/44.01 g mol
-1)*8.314 J mol
-1 K
-1*300 K/0.0067 m
3P = 23853615.3588 Pa
http://www.pastor.hr/tfpdf/vatrogasni_aparat.php?id=24http://www.analytix.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/TN-32-Compression-and-Condensation-of-CO2.pdf