1/52
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced | Call with Kai |
|---|
No analytics yet
Send a link to your students to track their progress
Pressure measured from zero pressure, or a vacuum. It is expressed in terms of PSIA.
Absolute pressure
The point at which all molecular motion ceases. Absolute zero is-460 ° F and -273 ° C.
Absolute zero
A system for cooling the air in the cabin of a turbojet powered aircraft. Compressor bleed air passes through two heat exchangers where it gives up some of its heat; then it drives an expansion turbine where it loses still more of its heat energy as the turbine drives a compressor. When the air leaves the turbine it expands and its pressure and temperature are both low.
Air-cycle cooling system.
The pressure of the air surrounding a person or an object.
Ambient pressure
The temperature of the air surrounding a person or an object.
Ambient temperature
An evacuated and sealed metallic bellows that is used as a pressure measuring element for absolute pressure.
Aneroid
Oxygen that has had all of the water and water vapor removed from it.
Aviators' oxygen
The amount of heat energy needed to raise the temperature of one pound of pure water 1 ° F.
British thermal unit (Btu).
The amount of heat energy needed to raise the temperature of one gram of pure water 1 ° C.
Calorie
. A handy and compact arrangement of air conditioning servicing equipment. A charging stand contains a vacuum pump, a manifold gage set, and a method of measuring and dispensing the refrigerant.
Charging stand
An oxygen system used for emergency or backup purposes. A candle, a solid block of a chemical that releases oxygen when it is burned, is installed in a special fireproof fixture. When oxygen is needed, the candle is ignited by a firing pin striking a percussion cap, and oxygen flows through flexible tubing to the masks.
Chemical oxygen generator system
A type of cabin heater used in some aircraft. Gasoline from the aircraft fuel tanks is burned in the heater.
Combustion heater
A pressure gage used to measure the pressure in the low side of an air conditioning system. A compound gage is calibrated from zero to 30-inches of mercury vacuum, and from zero to about 150-pounds per square inch positive pressure.
Compound gage.
The component in a vapor cycle cooling system in which the low pressure refrigerant vapors, after they leave the evaporator, are compressed to increase both their temperature and pressure before they pass into the condenser.
Compressor
The component in a vapor cycle cooling system in which the heat taken from the aircraft cabin is given up to the ambient air outside the aircraft.
Condenser
The mode of pressurization in which the cabin pressure is maintained a constant amount higher than the outside air pressure. The maximum differential pressure is determined by the structural strength of the aircraft cabin.
Constant-differential mode
A type of oxygen system that allows a metered amount of oxygen to continuously flow into the mask. A rebreather-type mask is used with a continuous-flow system.
Continuous-flow oxygen system
A vacuum pump capable of removing almost all of the air from a refrigeration system.
Deep-vacuum pump
A drying agent used in a refrigeration system to remove water from the refrigerant.
Desiccant
The difference between two pressures. It is expressed in terms of PSID.
Differential pressure
A popular type of oxygen system in which the oxygen is metered to the mask where it is diluted with cabin air by an airflow-metering aneroid assembly which regulates the amount of air allowed to dilute the oxygen on the basis of cabin altitude.
Diluter-demand oxygen system
The component in a vapor cycle cooling system in which heat from the aircraft cabin is absorbed into the refrigerant. As the heat is absorbed, the refrigerant evaporates, or changes from a liquid into a vapor.
Evaporator
The registered trade name for a refrigerant used in a vapor-cycle air conditioning system.
Freon
Pressure referenced from the existing atmospheric pressure. It is expressed in terms of psig.
Gage pressure
A device used to exchange heat from one medium to another. Radiators, condensers, and evaporators are all examples of heat exchangers. Heat always moves from the object or medium having the greatest level of heat energy to a medium or object having a lower level.
Heat exchanger
A pressure test used to determine the serviceability of high pressure oxygen cylinders. The cylinders are filled with water and pressurized to 5⁄3 of their working pressure.
Hydrostatic test
A physiological condition in which a person is deprived of the needed oxygen.
Hypoxia
A special venturi in a line carrying air from certain areas in an aircraft that need an augmented flow of air through them. High-velocity compressor bleed air is blown into the throat of a venturi where it produces a low pressure that pulls air from the area to which it is connected.
Jet pump
Heat that is added to a material that causes a change in its state without changing its temperature.
Latent heat
A unit of linear measurement equal to one millionth of a meter, or one thousandth of a millimeter.
Micron ("micro meter")
Mean sea level. Altitude is measured from mean, or average, sea level.
MSL
A valve that opens anytime the outside air pressure is greater than the cabin pressure. It prevents the cabin altitude ever becoming greater than the aircraft flight altitude.
Negative pressure relief valve
A valve in the cabin of a pressurized aircraft that controls the cabin pressure by opening to relieve all pressure above that for which the cabin pressure control is set.
Outflow valve
The percentage of the total pressure of a mixture of gases produced by each of the individual gases in the mixture.
Partial pressure
The altitude in standard air at which the pressure is the same as the existing pressure.
Pressure altitude
A valve used in an oxygen system to change high cylinder pressure to low system pressure.
Pressure reducing valve
A valve in an oxygen system that relieves the pressure if the pressure reducing valve should fail.
Pressure relief valve
The strengthened portion of an aircraft structure that is sealed and pressurized in flight.
Pressure vessel
A type of oxygen system used by aircraft that fly at very high altitude. This system functions as a diluter-demand system ( See diluter demand oxygen system) until, at about 40,000 feet, the output to the mask is pressurized enough to force the needed oxygen into the lungs, rather than depending on the low pressure produced when the wearer of the mask inhales to pull in the oxygen
Pressure-demand oxygen system
To remove all of the moisture and air from a cooling system by flushing the system with a dry gaseous refrigerant.
Purge
A type of oxygen mask used with a continuous-flow system. Oxygen continuously flows into the bottom of the loose-fitting rebreather bag on the mask. The wearer of the mask exhales into the top of the bag. The first air exhaled contains some oxygen, and this air goes into the bag first. The last air to leave the lungs contains little oxygen, and it is forced out of the bag as the bag is filled with fresh oxygen. Each time the wearer of the mask inhales, the air first exhaled, along with fresh oxygen, is taken into the lungs.
Rebreather oxygen mask
The component in a vapor-cycle cooling system that serves as a reservoir for the liquid refrigerant.
Receiver-dryer
A thin, leaf-type valve mounted in the valve plate of an air conditioning compressor to control the flow of refrigerant gases into and out of the compressor cylinders.
Reed valve
A positive displacement air pump that uses two intermeshing figure-8-shaped rotors to move the air.
Roots-type air compressor
A type of service valve used in an air conditioning system. This is a spring-loaded valve much like the valve used to put air into a tire
Schrader valve
Heat that is added to a liquid that causes a change in its temperature but not its physical state.
Sensible heat
A small window in the high side of a vapor-cycle cooling system. Liquid refrigerant flows past the sight glass, and if the charge of refrigerant is low, bubbles will be seen. A fully charged system has no bubbles in the refrigerant.
Sight glass
A venturi in a line between a turbine engine or turbocharger and a pressurization system. When the air flowing through the venturi reaches the speed of sound, a shock wave forms across the throat of the venturi and limits the flow.
Sonic venturi
The number of Btu's of heat energy needed to change the temperature of one pound of a substance 1 ° F.
Specific heat.
Heat energy that is added to a refrigerant after it changes from a liquid to a vapor.
Superheat
A calibrated orifice in the mask adapter for a continuous-flow oxygen system that increases the flow of oxygen to a mask being used by a passenger who is known to have a heart or respiratory problem.
Therapeutic mask adapter
The component in a vapor-cycle cooling system that meters the refrigerant into the evaporator.
Thermostatic expansion valve (TEV
A liquid that easily changes into a vapor.
Volatile liquid