Technical Article
Helium Tracer Leak Detection Methods
Helium tracer leak detection uses helium as a tracer gas and a helium mass spectrometer to identify small leaks. Common methods include vacuum chamber, spray, sniffer, and accumulation.

Key Points
- Helium tracer testing helps find small leaks that standard air testing may miss.
- Vacuum chamber testing suits stable batch judgment; spray and sniffer methods support localization or troubleshooting.
- Method selection depends on part structure, leak-rate target, cycle time, and site conditions.
Customer Concern
Customers sometimes think helium testing is one fixed device. In real projects, testing method, fixture, gas path, and site workflow all affect the result. Understanding method differences improves selection accuracy.
Selection Framework
Basic principle
Helium is small, has low background, and can be identified by a helium mass spectrometer. During testing, helium filling, vacuum pumping, sampling, or local spraying allows the system to detect helium passing through a leak.
Method differences
Vacuum chamber testing suits batch detection and clear judgment. Spray helium is often used for leak localization. Sniffer testing supports external sampling. Accumulation fits selected special structures. Each method has different requirements.
Factors affecting stability
Leak-rate target, part volume, fixture sealing, helium background, gas-path cleanliness, pumping capacity, and operation workflow all affect stability. Solution design should review these factors together.
DROIDE SHANGHAI support
DROIDE SHANGHAI can review customer parts, targets, and site conditions to recommend suitable helium tracer testing methods and configure equipment, fixtures, vacuum systems, and delivery plans.
FAQ
How is helium testing different from standard air testing?
Helium testing is usually used for higher sensitivity and small-leak identification; standard air testing suits larger leaks or general sealing checks.
Can spray helium be used for batch production?
It can be used in some cases, but stable batch testing often requires vacuum chamber or automated workflows.
Why does the testing environment matter?
Helium background, gas-path contamination, and operation habits can affect results and should be controlled.
Related Topics
- helium tracer leak detection
- helium leak detection principle
- vacuum chamber method
- spray helium method
- sniffer method
- DROIDE SHANGHAI
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