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by manarth
1097 days ago
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> If they had a method to keep 382 bar of water dynamically out of the ballast tanks By filling the ballast tanks with 382 bar of air. The human-interior of the sub is maintained at 1 bar to avoid compression demands (hyperoxic seizure triggers at approx 7.6 bar when breathing atmospheric gases; HPNS (High Pressure Nervous Syndrome) is common after 16 bar on a helium-oxygen mix), and decompression requirements. Equalizing the inside-outside pressures would help a lot with the composite materials, and somewhat less so with the fleshy meat bags inside. |
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In that case you'd actually need a PV rated for 740 bar, which seems outside our current materials science abilities. In fact (and I'm still mostly just spitballing here, not actually doing any math), I assume you actually need a purge tank with a pressure much greater than 2x, otherwise you're just cancelling out your ballast with your air tank, right?
That would track with using this system in submersibles that are operating at ~300m and not for things like this which are trying to operate at 4000m. At 300m you could have a 400 bar COPV for emergency purging that is only 7.5% the size of the ballast tanks, which sounds practical.