SVC Education Program

Detailed SVC Course Syllabus

VACUUM TECHNOLOGY: COMPONENTS AND SYSTEMS

SVC V-202: Vacuum System Gas Analysis

Gas Laws

The important laws that describe the behavior of gas in a vacuum system are described in this module. These laws and concepts explain how vacuum systems behave.

Gas Flow

How gas flows in pipes and through chambers is most important. It is the basis of how pumps and pipe sizes are chosen. This module describes the important flow regions and how they apply to a vacuum system.

Vacuum Gauges

Although there are dozens of pressure measuring techniques, this module is limited to describing only the most common commercial gauges used today.

Residual Gas Analyzers

A residual gas analyzer—often called a mass spectrometer—is an instrument that can measure a signal proportional to the quantity of individual gas and vapor components. This module is limited to describing the analyzer—the equipment—used to separate and identify individual components in a vacuum atmosphere

Residual Gas Analysis

The analysis of the measured analysis pattern is often not so complex as first thought. In this module we break the observed spectrum into many small parts and examine each separately. Then, we put these together and learn characteristic shapes of spectra for typical situations such as a clean vacuum system, a leaky vacuum system, an oil-contaminated system, synthetic fluids, greases, O-rings, a gas line leak, a water line leak, and so on.

Leak Detection

Detecting leaks is a most important application that uses pressure gauges or residual gas analyzers. This module describes when and how to check for leaks in components and systems. It also provides many nuts-and-bolts tricks to leak check difficult locations and components

Instructor: John O'Hanlon, University of Arizona, Tucson