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A gas spring, also known as a gas strut or gas damper, is a type of spring that, unlike a typical mechanical spring that relies on elastic deformation, uses compressed gas contained within an enclosed cylinder.[1] They rely on a sliding piston to pneumatically store potential energy and withstand external force applied parallel to the direction of the piston shaft (loosely analogous similarly to a bicycle pump without a gas outlet).
Gas springs are used in automobiles to support hatches, hoods, and covers.[2] They are also used in furniture and doors, as well as in medical beds.[2] They are used industrially in machine tool presses.[2] Fast-acting gas springs are used in aerospace design and weapons applications, and large, extended gas springs are used in passive heave compensators, which stabilize drilling operations against waves.[2]
Gas springs are usually implemented in one of two ways. A pneumatic suspension gas spring directly compresses a chamber of air with the piston. A hydro-pneumatic suspension gas spring instead compresses a chamber of oil linked to an accumulator in which the pressure of the oil compresses the gas.[3] Nitrogen is a common gas in gas springs because it is inert and nonflammable.[2]