Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

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cope413
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Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by cope413 »

We just got a new toy at the office...

a shiny new 1.9cf vacuum oven.

It will pull 30" of Hg and get up to 572F

Preliminary testing with cups of water were fantastic, and by our estimation, we should be able to dry 1lb of fully saturated nylon in less than 30 minutes with no heat stress on the filament.

We'll begin testing and experimenting, and soon we'll offer vacuum drying as an add-on for filament.

Let me know if you've got anything you want to see tried/experimented with

Eventually we'll test every filament, but first to be tested (dry vs wet, how much water, how long to dry, etc)
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Eaglezsoar
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by Eaglezsoar »

What temperature would you use to dry the nylon?
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by teoman »

I did have an experiment. But since i moved house to a crummy shithole in the middle of the city. Experimentations have halted.

So my idea was about acetone polishing.

Instead of a heat based method, the one could apply a voccum to get it in vapor.
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by travelphotog »

I am looking forward to following this post closely. Please keep us updated. I had been thinking about a vacuum drying chamber but had not pulled the trigger yet. I am looking forward to seeing the results.
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by cope413 »

Eagle,

Water boils at ~80F when under 30"Hg vacuum. The trick, we are discovering, is getting the filament (and thus the water in the filament) up to temperature before pulling vacuum. There isn't good (or really any) transfer of heat under vacuum, so as long as the filament is above 80F before the vacuum is applied, the water will boil and evaporate.

We'll have some results this week that we'll share.
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by jeffhuber »

awesome!! cant wait to hear what you find!
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by lightninjay »

cope413 wrote:Eagle,

Water boils at ~80F when under 30"Hg vacuum. The trick, we are discovering, is getting the filament (and thus the water in the filament) up to temperature before pulling vacuum. There isn't good (or really any) transfer of heat under vacuum, so as long as the filament is above 80F before the vacuum is applied, the water will boil and evaporate.

We'll have some results this week that we'll share.
I've got it! Put the vacuum oven into a bigger oven to keep the temperature at 80* before you pull the vacuum! :P
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by rpress »

So how has it been working? I've been thinking of getting a dryer myself. How long do you soak for and at what temperature? How long do you need to keep it at vacuum?
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by Proto »

Ok, when I first saw title to this post I thought... Chocolate Cake!


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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by Mac The Knife »

Mmmm. cake. Maybe not so much for that, but I wonder how it would do making beef jerky.
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by dtgriscom »

Mac The Knife wrote:Mmmm. cake. Maybe not so much for that, but I wonder how it would do making beef jerky.
Make a nice lemon meringue pie, and then desiccate it. For the next time you go hiking and want faux gourmet cooking.

Or, make a fruitcake that will truly last forever.




Or not.
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by Eaglezsoar »

cope413 wrote:We just got a new toy at the office...

a shiny new 1.9cf vacuum oven.

It will pull 30" of Hg and get up to 572F

Preliminary testing with cups of water were fantastic, and by our estimation, we should be able to dry 1lb of fully saturated nylon in less than 30 minutes with no heat stress on the filament.

We'll begin testing and experimenting, and soon we'll offer vacuum drying as an add-on for filament.

Let me know if you've got anything you want to see tried/experimented with

Eventually we'll test every filament, but first to be tested (dry vs wet, how much water, how long to dry, etc)
Nylon (all versions)
TPE
TPU
PC
Tritan


2014-10-24 18.52.56.jpg
When the filament is heated while under a vacuum, am I correct that the water in the filament turns to steam (hydogen and oxygen gases) which then go through the vacuum pump and dissipates to the room air?
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by dtgriscom »

Eaglezsoar wrote:When the filament is heated while under a vacuum, am I correct that the water in the filament turns to steam (hydogen and oxygen gases) which then go through the vacuum pump and dissipates to the room air?
The water turns to steam/vapor, but that's still H2O; it doesn't disassociate into hydrogen and oxygen.


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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by teoman »

Vacuum lowers the boiling pressure of the water. So you can get water to boil at any temperature you want. This is the inverse of a pressure cooker. If you apply pressure (or do not let the pressure of the evaporating water escape) then you can cook your food at a higher temperature which shortens the time.

You heat the filament before you apply a vacuum, because vacuum (or the lack of material) is a fairly poor conductor. So it is difficult to heat or cool stuff under a vacuum. (Cooling electronics is difficult in space and necessitates special measures).

But you are not correct in the sense that the gas is still water vapor which is H2O, the hydrogen and oxygen does not separate. If they did, then that would be pretty dangerous as it might cause an explosion. Or you would be able to easily harness some hydrogen.
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by Eaglezsoar »

teoman wrote:Vacuum lowers the boiling pressure of the water. So you can get water to boil at any temperature you want. This is the inverse of a pressure cooker. If you apply pressure (or do not let the pressure of the evaporating water escape) then you can cook your food at a higher temperature which shortens the time.

You heat the filament before you apply a vacuum, because vacuum (or the lack of material) is a fairly poor conductor. So it is difficult to heat or cool stuff under a vacuum. (Cooling electronics is difficult in space and necessitates special measures).

But you are not correct in the sense that the gas is still water vapor which is H2O, the hydrogen and oxygen does not separate. If they did, then that would be pretty dangerous as it might cause an explosion. Or you would be able to easily harness some hydrogen.
Thanks for your reply.
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by RocketMagnet »

Your lowering the pressure below the vapour pressure of the liquid at a specific temperature.. in this case water.
So with the correct vacuum you wont need any additional heating above room temp at all - with 30" Hg pulling just the Vacuum with no heating should be more than enough ???

Also IMO it's not just a simple case of heating up the filament then applying a vacuum (well decrease the pressure) as you'll need to control the rate
the pressure reduction is applied. You wont want the water to be removed too quickly as it could damage the filament structure. Clearly it's material specific but blowing lots of small holes with a variable distribution in your filament probably wont be beneficial.
Without access to a powerful microscope your only really going to know if any of the physical attributes change (e.g it becomes less pliable/brittle etc).

So it's harder than it sounds IMO so much respect to cope143. I think it will be a fantastic process for Nylon and most other material types with the right temps and rate/level/duration of vacuum. Like others here really interested in your results...
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by teoman »

How many bars is 30 in Hg in relative vacuum?

when i look it up it is 1.015 bars. But that cant be a vacuum because you go below 0.
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by Durandal »

Just a thought for heating the filament inside a vacuum, how about a heat lamp, infrared radiation will pass easily through the vacuum and be absorbed by the filament/spool.
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by precisionpete »

From looking at the chart there is no need to heat.

The main thing a vacuum system pumps and removes first is water vapor. Then all the other gases in the system.

Any results yet?
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Re: Let the Vacuum Oven Fun Begin!

Post by teoman »

With IR based tech you are only heating the outside of the filament. As vacuum is a good insulator you risk over heating some spots.
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