I myself don't know how to perform these calculations. These calculations primarily determine how long the gas flow will last at 15 LPM. As I said if using argon you have to make adjustments because argon is heavier than nitrogen so you need a higher LPM figure of argon flowing to equal the 15 LPM you'd get using nitrogen. See Eweforia's posts about that. Also use the search function and look for posts by TiredHorse. He discusses this subject in great detail.
Think i found
@Eweforia's post (regarding using Argon Regulator for Nitrogen gas): https://sanctioned-suicide.net/threads/exit-bag-and-inert-gas-megathread.8393/post-396412
Ewforia says something about "nudge the flow up from the suggested 15 L/min to somewhere between 19-22 L/min "
Think i found @Eweforia's post (regarding using Argon Regulator for Nitrogen gas): https://sanctioned-suicide.net/threads/exit-bag-and-inert-gas-megathread.8393/post-396412
Ewforia says something about "nudge the flow up from the suggested 15 L/min to somewhere between 19-22 L/min "
But shouldn't the situation be "nudging down the flow" from the 15 L/min?
Because I feel the Argon Regulator reading 15Lpm means that more than 15 Liters (of Nitrogen) is flowing through the Regulator per minute (since Nitrogen gas is lighter than Argon gas)..
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EDIT: I was reading here (
http://ch301.cm.utexas.edu/gases/ideal-gas-law/idealgaslaw-all.php) and it mentions a concept called 'Number Density'. So i googled "do all gases have same number density" and one of the first search results leads me to the similar questions list where it asks "do all gases have same pressure?"
So i click "do all gases have same pressure?" and it gives me a link to Avogadro's law (
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avogadro's_law). According to Wikipedia, Avogadro's law says that:
"Equal volumes of all gases, at the same temperature and pressure, have the same number of molecules."
"For a given mass of an
ideal gas, the volume and amount (moles) of the gas are directly proportional if the
temperature and
pressure are constant."
So, would Avogadro's law imply the following?:
The # of Nitrogen molecules flowing at 15 Lpm would be the same as the # of Argon molecules flowing at 15 Lpm, at a given point in a Regulator.
So, if the above is implication is true, then what would that mean (in terms of the flow rate inside a Regulator)?
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2nd EDIT:
So, measurement-wise, the Regulator/Flowmeter will measure the flow rate by the amount of momentum the flowmeter gets hit during a given moment. So.. since Argon is heavier than Nitrogen, Argon will have more amount of momentum measured on the flowmeter during a given moment (let's say in a second).
So, Nitrogen would need to flow faster in order to meet this amount of momentum measured on the flowmeter during a given moment (i.e. in a second).
So, this would mean that Nitrogen flow rate needs to be higher than 15 Lpm for the Argon Regulator/Flowmeter to display the measurement of 15 Lpm (the "15Lpm of Argon" standard).
So, this means that if the reading is 15 Lpm on Argon Flowmeter, then the reading means Nitrogen is flowing at higher rate than 15 Lpm.
So we should nudge down the flow to less than 15 Lpm to appear on Argon Flowmeter, in order for Nitrogen to be flowing at 15 Lpm (because Nitrogen was flowing at higher rate than 15 Lpm when the reading actually says 15 Lpm on Argon Flowmeter).
Is this argument valid?
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3rd EDIT:
I guess it depends on what the actual mechanism the Flowmeter operates with in order to measure the flow rate.....
Does a Flowmeter measure a gas's flowrate (Lpm) with a measure of how many molecules are passing through during a given moment?
Would the above question be the same thing as asking the following question?:
Does a Flowmeter measure a gas's flowrate (Lpm) with a measure of an amount of momentum during a given moment?
In ANY CASE, it seems the important question is: How does a Flowmeter measure the flow rate? Is it with oil in the flowmeter cylinder? What's the underlying mechanism that allows the flowmeter to measure a flow rate?
Final EDIT: I found this video here (
https://www.omega.com/en-us/resources/flow-meters) about flowmeter. After watching the video, i keep getting a feeling that a Gas Flowmeter's mechanism possibly operates in either "Paddlewheel Flow Meter" principle or "Variable Area Flow Meter" principle.