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Diving cylinder

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12 litre and 3 litre steel diving cylinders
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12 litre and 3 litre steel diving cylinders

A diving cylinder (the term which tends to be used by divers) or SCUBA tank (more often used colloquially by non-divers) is used to store and transport high pressure breathing gas as a component of an Aqua-Lung. It provides gas to the SCUBA diver through the demand valve of a diving regulator. Diving cylinders are typically filled in the range of 186 to 300 bar (2700 to 4400 psi, or 18.6 to 30.0 MPa) and have a volume of 1.5 to 18 litres or a gas carrying capacity of 850 to 4200 litres (24 to 120 ft³).

Divers use gas cylinders above water for many purposes including storage of gases for oxygen first aid treatment of diving disorders and as part of storage "banks" for diving air compressor stations. There are also used for many purposes not connected to diving.

Parts of a cylinder

The diving cylinder consists of several parts:

An A clamp type pillar valve
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An A clamp type pillar valve

Types of pillar valve

There are three types of pillar valve:
A 232 DIN type pillar valve
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A 232 DIN type pillar valve

The new European Norm EN 144-3:2003 introduced a new type of valve, similar to existing 232 bar or 300 bar DIN valves, however, with a metric M 26×2 fitting on both the cylinder and the regulator. These are to be used for breathing gas with oxygen content above that normally found in natural air in the Earth's atmosphere (i.e., 22% –100%). From August 2008, these shall be required for all diving equipment used with Nitrox or pure oxygen. The idea behind this new standard is to prevent a rich mixture being filled to a cylinder, which is not oxygen clean. However even with use of the new system there still remains nothing except human procedural care to ensure that a cylinder with a new valve remains oxygen-clean - which is exactly how the current system works. The new standards have been argued therefore to be an unfortunate symptom of needless bureaucratic hindrance from the EU.

Purposes of diving cylinders

Divers may carry more than one cylinder. In parts of the world where diving takes place in warm water and in good visibility, recreational divers usually carry only cylinder. An example of this type is coral reef diving where it is possible to do an interesting dive without going deep or needing long decompression. Where diving risks are higher, for example in parts of the world where the water is cold and visibility is low or when recreational divers do deeper or decompression diving, divers routinely carry more than one gas source. An example of this type is north European diving where the temperature is often less than 15°C/60°F and visibility less than 10m/33ft and many interesting dive sites are shipwrecks in deeper water on the sea bed.

Each cylinder may have a different purpose:

Divers doing technical diving often carry different gases, each in a separate cylinder, for each phase of the dive: Rebreathers also use internal cylinders:

Breathing capacity

A commonly asked question is 'what is the underwater duration of a particular cylinder?'

There are two parts to this answer:

1. What is the cylinder's capacity to store gas?

Two features of the cylinder determine its gas carrying capacity:

To calculate the quantity of gas:
quantity of gas = volume x pressure
So, a 3 litre, 300 bar cylinder can carry up to 900 litres (33 ft³) of gas.

2. How much gas does the diver consume?

There are three factors at work here:

To calculate the quantity of gas consumed:
gas consumed = breathing rate x pressure x time
Thus, a diver with a breathing rate of 20 lpm will consume at 30 meters (4 bar) the equivalent of 80 lpm at 1 bar (80 lpm at the surface). If this diver only had the 3 litre 300 bar cylinder to breathe from (900 litres at 1 bar), the gas in the cylinder would be exhausted after a little over 900/80 = about 11 minutes.

Reserves

It is strongly recommended that a portion of the usable gas of the cylinder be held aside as a safety reserve. The reserve is designed to provide gas for longer than planned decompression stops or to provide time to resolve underwater emergencies.

The size of the reserve depends upon the risks involved during the dive. A deep or decompression dive warrants a greater reserve than a shallow or a no stop dive. In recreational diving for example, it is recommended that the diver plans to surface with a reserve remaining in the cylinder of 500 psi, 50 bar or 25% of the initial capacity, depending of the teaching of the diver training organisation. On technical dives, such as penetration diving or deep diving, divers plan larger margins of safety using the Rule of Thirds: one third of the gas supply is planned for the outward journey, one third is for the return journey and one third is a safety reserve.

Some training agencies teach the concept of minimum gas and provide a simple calculation that allows a diver to work out an acceptable reserve to get two divers in an emergency to the surface. See DIR diving for more information.

Configuring cylinders

For safety, divers sometimes carry an additional redundant aqualung (a second scuba tank and scuba valve) to mitigate out-of-air emergencies should the primary breathing source fail. For most common recreational diving (for example dives of 20 m to examine typical coral reefs) such extra equipment is usually not needed or used.

Open-circuit

For open-circuit divers, there are several options for the combined cylinder and regulator system:

7 litre, 232 bar, DIN independent twin set. The left cylinder shows manufacturer markings. The right cylinder shows test stamps
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7 litre, 232 bar, DIN independent twin set. The left cylinder shows manufacturer markings. The right cylinder shows test stamps

Closed-circuit

Diving cylinders are used in closed-circuit diving in two roles:

Filling tanks

Tanks should only be filled with air from diving air compressors or with other breathing gases using gas blending techniques. Both these services should be provided by reliable suppliers such as dive shops. Breathing industrial compressed gases can be lethal because the high pressure increases the effect of any impurities in them.

Special precautions need to be taken with gases other than air:

Contaminated air at depth can be fatal. Common contaminants are: carbon monoxide a by-product of combustion, carbon dioxide a product of metabolism, oil and lubricants from the compressor.

The blast caused by a sudden release of the gas pressure inside a diving cylinder makes them very dangerous if mismanaged. The greatest risk of explosion exists at filling time and comes from thinning of the walls of the pressure vessel due to corrosion. Another cause of failure is damage or corrosion of the threads and neck of the cylinder where the pillar valve is screwed in. Aluminium cylinders have been observed occasionally to fail explosively, fragmenting the cylinder wall. Steel cylinders usually remain mostly intact, and tend to fail at the neck.

Keeping the cylinder slightly pressurized at all times reduces the possibility of contaminating the inside of the cylinder with corrosive agents, such as sea water, or toxic material, such as oils, poisonous gases, fungi or bacteria.

Manufacture and testing

Most countries require tanks to be checked on a regular basis, see gas cylinder. This usually consists of an internal visual inspection and a hydrostatic test. In the United States, a visual inspection is required every year, and a hydrostatic every five years. In European Union countries a visual inspection is required every 2.5 years, and a hydrostatic every five years. In Norway a hydrostatic (including a visual inspection) is required 3 years after production date, then every 2 years.

Legislation in Australia requires that cylinders are hydrostatically tested every twelve months, regardless.

A hydrostatic test involves pressurising the cylinder to its test pressure and measuring its volume before and after the test. A permanent increase in volume above the tolerated level means the cylinder fails the test and should be destroyed.

When a cylinder is manufactured, its specification, including Working Pressure, Test Pressure, Data of Manufacture, Capacity and Weight are stamped on the cylinder.

On testing, the test date, or the test expiry date in some countries such as Germany, is punched into the neck of the tank for easy verification at fill time.

Most compressor operators check these details before filling the cylinder and may refuse to fill non-standard or out-of-test cylinders.

Gas cylinder colour coding

In the European Union gas cylinders are beginning to be colour coded according to EN 1098-3. The "shoulder" is the top of the cylinder close to the pillar valve.

Worldwide, in many recreational diving settings where air and nitrox are the widely used gases, nitrox cylinders are colour-coded with a green stripe on yellow bottom. The normal colour of aluminium diving cylinders is their natural silver. Steel diving cylinders are often painted, to reduce corrosion, mainly yellow or white to increase visibility. In some industrial cylinder identification colour tables, yellow means chlorine, but this is of no significance in SCUBA since gas fittings would not be compatible.

Cylinder labelling

An contents label for oxygen usage
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An contents label for oxygen usage

In the European Union breathing gas cylinders must be labelled with their contents. The label should state the type of breathing gas contained by the cylinder.

Cylinders that are subject to gas blending with pure oxygen also need an "oxygen service certificate" label indicating they have been prepared for use in an oxygen-rich environment.

 


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