Helium Leak Testing Guide
Helium Leak Testing Guide
Helium Leak Testing Guide
www.tqc.co.uk [email protected]
Tel: +44 (0) 115 9503561 Fax: +44 (0) 115 9484642
Background Helium concentration. Helium can and will get everywhere if it can. It gets quite difficult sometimes to determine where the helium is coming from. There is approximately 5 ppm Helium in the atmosphere. If the part under test is filled with helium it is important that the test charge is taken away and not just released into the immediate area. For just a few tests, the helium can be diluted in the immediate area. For more frequent testing, this may mean piping the extract away to the outside of the building on the downwind side and well clear from doors or windows that could allow it back in. To locate helium leaks one usually either sprays or sniffs, the latter being the norm in high volume testing. When sniffing one starts with 5 ppm and would usually look to detect an increase of a further 5 ppm. One can use this detectable rise in helium concentration to test parts inside a shroud where the test pressure is at or near atmospheric pressure. By circulating the air within the shroud and passing it by a mass spectrometer in sniffing mode, you can set an alarm limit at say 8ppm. Again it is important to flush or extract away any contaminated air once the test has completed. Helium leak testing at high production rates. When high volume production requires high vacuum, you must also consider the time taken to pump down to the required level of vacuum, this can be significant. At higher production rates, having much shorter time to test a part, large leakers may be a problem. The flooding of the leak test instrument with helium may take several minutes for the helium to reduce to a level where testing can recommence. To reduce the effect of a large leaker one can; build up to the full test pressure, build up to the full concentration, flush the mass spec with a gas with no helium present or pre-screen using an air decay technique before helium testing (this would only allow small leakers to be helium tested. When testing at high speed it is important to reduce the test time to its minimum. To do this one may have to employ a number of techniques to; reduce the test volume (by infilling voids and ensuring minimum pipe run volumes), nitrogen flush, etc. Of course at high speed the automatic handling of the product and automatic connection play a large part. Helium mixing, helium recovery and helium re-use When testing large volumes, at higher pressures and at high speed, the quantity of helium being used may become significant. There are a number of techniques to reduce the consumption of the helium gas. First of these is to mix the helium with another lower cost gas either nitrogen or compressed air. This is only possible where the sensitivity of the test is not compromised by the mixing process. The second of these is to re-use the gas from one test by extracting it from the device and then pushing it into the next device. This can often be implemented by a combination of a vacuum pump and simple air cylinder arrangement if the volume is not too large. Between cycles it is possible to use the mass spectrometer to monitor the concentration of helium that is being reused; when the concentration falls below an acceptable level it is dumped and a new charge of helium is used. The third technique is helium recovery. Here one extracts the helium into an intermediate holding vessel to be compressed to high pressure to recover the helium. I hope you find the above a useful introduction into the area of helium leak testing. If you have a project in mind or would like a more detailed discussion on the possibilities of helium leak testing your product please contact us at TQC.
www.tqc.co.uk [email protected]
Tel: +44 (0) 115 9503561 Fax: +44 (0) 115 9484642