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ullage

 
Dictionary: ul·lage   (ŭl'ĭj) pronunciation

n.
  1. The amount of liquid within a container that is lost, as by leakage, during shipment or storage.
  2. The amount by which a container, such as a bottle, cask, or tank, falls short of being full.

[Middle English ulage, from Old French ouillage, from ouiller, to fill up a cask, from ouil, eye, bunghole, from Latin oculus, eye.]

ullaged ul'laged adj.

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Wordsmith Words: ullage
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(UL-ij)

noun
The amount of liquid by which a container falls short of being full.

Etymology
Middle English ulage, from Old French eullage, from eullier, to fill a cask, (from ouil eye, hole, from Latin oculus eye)

WordPix: wordsmith.org/words/ullage.gif.

Usage
"`Is the gas tank half-empty or half-full,' Grouler continued driving while pondering the ullage and soon he was out of gas 47 miles from the nearest gas station."


Food and Nutrition: ullage
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Liquid left in cask or bottle after some has been removed.

[UHL-ihj] The empty space that develops in bottles, barrels, or casks as wine evaporates. It's important for the ullage in casks or barrels to be kept to a minimum by topping so that the air exposure won't cause oxidation. Older bottles of wine may have a larger space between the cork and the wine owing to slow leakage or evaporation over time. However, a young bottle of wine with a large ullage could indicate a faulty cork. See also fill level.

Obscure Words: ullage
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1) the amount which a vessel, as a cask of wine, lacks of being full; wantage; deficiency
2) slang  the amount (of wine) left in glasses in a restaurant
Wikipedia: Ullage
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Ullage refers to the unfilled space in a container of liquid.

Contents

Etymology

The word comes ultimately from the Latin oculus, “eye”, which was used in a figurative sense by the Romans for the bung hole of a barrel. This was taken into French in the medieval period as oeil, from which a verb ouiller was created, to fill a barrel up to the bung hole. In turn, a noun ouillage was created, which was the immediate source of our word, first recorded in Norman English about 1300, at first in the sense of the amount of liquid needed to fill a barrel up to the bung hole.

Wine and spirits

By an obvious extension, ullage came to refer to any amount by which a barrel is unfilled, perhaps because some of the contents have been used. And it is also applied to the unfilled air space at the top of a bottle of wine, which in this case is essential to allow for expansion of the contents as the temperature changes.

Rocketry

Three sets of ullage motors are shown in this schematic of the Saturn V rocket

In liquid rockets, ullage is the space within a fuel tank above the liquid propellant. This term derives from the term 'ullage' in winemaking, where it refers to the space above the liquid in a container such as a barrel or wine bottle.

Liquid, cryogenic rockets keep their propellant in tanks. These tanks are never completely filled in order to allow for the expansion of the cold liquid propellant. On the ground, the space between the top of the propellant load and the top of the tank is known as "ullage space".

In micro-gravity conditions the gas may float around and threaten to be sucked into the engines, which is typically very undesirable. Small rocket engines are sometimes used to settle the propellant prior to the main engine ignition. These are called ullage motors.

Industrial use

Ullage is also widely used in industrial or marine settings to describe the empty space in large tanks or holds used to store or carry liquids or bulk solids such as grain[1]. In accordance with IMO regulations, the Code of Federal Regulations, and the ABS Rules for Steel Vessels, certain pressurized tanks on steel ships may not be filled greater than 98% full, although there are exceptions. This is so that the pressure relief valve is always in contact with a gas or vapor. Certain pressure relief valves for chemical use are not designed to relieve the pressure when in contact with liquids.

In some cases the ullage in a ship's hold can be relevant to stability; dry bulk cargo in a part-filled hold can shift asymmetrically towards one side as the ship heels to one side and the other, reducing the margin of stability when compared with a full hold.

References

  • ABS Rules for Steel Vessels 2007, Part 5C

External links


 
 
Learn More
topping; topping-up (wine-related term)
fill level (wine-related term)
enology (wine-related term)

What is an ullage report and when is it prepared? Read answer...

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Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wordsmith Words. © 2009 Wordsmith.org. All rights reserved.  Read more
Food and Nutrition. A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition. Copyright © 1995, 2003, 2005 by A. E. Bender and D. A. Bender. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wine Lover's Companion. Wine Lover's Companion. Copyright © 2003 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Obscure Words. © 2008 by Michael A. Fischer http://home.comcast.net/~wwftd Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ullage" Read more