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Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
We were having some heat problems with some of the electronic circuits on our robot. Is it legal to have liquid gases (nitrogen, helium, etc) as a coolant on our minibot or hostbot?
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Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
In what ways are you having heating problems on the robot? Although liquid nitrogen may be possible (and likely the safest of all liquid gases, it probably won't pass inspection on your robot. The reasoning would be that LN can be a major safety hazard due to it's low temperature, although there is no explicit rule saying it isn't allowed (assuming the no hydraulic fluid rule doesn't apply in this case).
Supposedly, it might be allowed for you to spray the stuff down before a match with compressed, supercooled gas, to lower the initial temperature well below zero, and hopefully it'll slow any overheating during a match. Just a theory, though. |
Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
I believe this would be illegal under the the rules that govern stored energy.
<R01> Energy used by FRC ROBOTS, (i.e., stored at the start of a MATCH), shall come only from the following sources: A. Electrical energy derived from the onboard 12V battery (see Rule <R34> for specifications and further details). B. Compressed air stored in the pneumatic system, stored at a maximum pressure of 120 PSI. C. A change in the altitude of the ROBOT center of gravity. D. Storage achieved by deformation of ROBOT parts. Try using the muffin fans that came with the kit. |
Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
What kind of circuit are you using that the heat generated can't be disipated by a heatsink/fan?
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Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
the kit of parts gives you four large fans and alot of smaller ones, try using those
also, I think you are overlooking the legal and logistical aspect of liquid gases; they are expensive and I believe you need a license of some sort to get them. |
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<R01>B <R69> <R87> <R90> |
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The energy stored in the compressed N2 tank is what causes the coolant to spray out. This, in combination with other rules (see earlier post) will almost certainly disallow your idea. |
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Compressed air, as I am led to believe, means compressed air, not a liquid form of a gas. The rules on de-pressurizing gas would be incapable of being applied. |
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Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
No, although I suppose someone might be capable of doing that. I was rather suggesting that pouring a rather minute amount of LN, or a similar supercooled, non-toxic gas onto the circuitry, and letting it evaporate in place of the circuits heating up, is technically the only feasible way to keep the circuitry cooled without completely enclosing the system, and thus removing most of liquid gas's benefits.
I'm not advocating doing any of this, aside from spraying it down with compressed air every so slightly before a match if circuit heating is a real issue, due to the extreme dangers of burning if it's mishandled and the usage is done poorly; just saying it could, ever so possibly, be legal. |
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I believe that's supposed to be: What could go wrong... go wrong... go wrong... |
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Sure, it might make everything brittle and shatter, but at least you won't have a short! :p |
Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
how is your electronic board heating up in the first place, nothing should overheat except perhaps a breaker, batteries can get a little warm too i guess.
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Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
team 20 was actually packing ice on their motors (or i assume it was the motors) between the matches in the finals at BAE
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Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
This wins this week's award for "Most Bizarre Thread".
Carry on. |
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The pneumatic compressor would probably move a lot more air in a small area than the muffin fans.... |
Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
A Peltier Device would also move a lot of heat onto a heat sink, which could then use a fan to dump into atmosphere.
Not sure if a water-cooled system would be allowed, like they use in some computers. |
Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
<R02> ROBOT parts shall not be made from hazardous materials, be unsafe, or cause an unsafe condition. Items specifically prohibited from use on the ROBOT include (but are not limited to):
And the various rules in several sections that speak to damaging the playing field, floors, etc. As unlikely as you think it might be, robot parts break, robots tip over, and other people are always present. Liquid gasses in any form pose such a hazard. Liquid coolants of any type cannot satisfy the above rules for safety and preventing damage to field or venue. While teams will go to any length to try and cool motors between matches, any external method does little to remove the internal heat stored in the motor. The path for conduction of the heat in the armature is only through the two end bearings and brush assembly or from direct radiation to the case and magnet structure of the motor. Teams that use freeze spray, run the risk of the material used in making the spray cold, flushing lubricants from exposed motor bearings. Extremely cold surfaces will also condense humidity out of the air like on the outside of a cold drink. Use freeze spray with caution. |
Re: Liquid Gases on Robot as coolant
Still, no ones answered what/why the circuitry is overheating in the first place. I feel that this should be the really issue here.
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I can't think of anyway to heat something that much without breaking a few robot rules that way, but that could be a failure of imagination on my part. |
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