Teledyne 9110T instruction manual Calibration Gases, Zero Air, Span Gas, Example

Models: 9110T

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Model 9110TH NOx Analyzer

Calibration Procedures

9.1.2. CALIBRATION GASES

9.1.2.1. Zero Air

Zero air or zero calibration gas is defined as a gas that is similar in chemical composition to the measured medium but without the gas to be measured by the analyzer.

For the 9110T, this means zero air should be devoid of NO, NO2, CO2, NH3 or H2O vapor.

Note

Moderate amounts of NH3 and H2O can be removed from the sample gas

 

stream by installing the optional sample gas dryer/scrubber (see Section

 

3.3.2.6).

If your application is not a measurement in ambient air, the zero calibration gas should be matched to the composition of the gas being measured.

Pure nitrogen (N2) could be used as a zero gas for applications where NOX is measured in nitrogen.

If your analyzer is equipped with an external zero air scrubber option, it is capable of creating zero air from ambient air.

For analyzers without the external zero air scrubber, a zero air generator such as the Teledyne Model 701 can be used. Please visit the company website for more information.

If your analyzer is equipped with an external zero air scrubber option, it is capable of creating zero air from ambient air.

If your application is not a measurement in ambient air, the zero calibration gas should be matched to the composition of the gas being measured.

Pure nitrogen could be used as a zero gas for applications where NOX is measured in nitrogen.

9.1.2.2.Span Gas

Calibration gas is a gas specifically mixed to match the chemical composition of the type of gas being measured at near full scale of the desired reporting range. To measure NOX with the 9110T NOX analyzer, it is recommended that you use a span gas with an NO concentration equal to 80% of the measurement range for your application

EXAMPLE:

If the application is to measure NOX in ambient air between 0 ppm and 500 ppb, an appropriate span gas would be 400 ppb.

If the application is to measure NOX in ambient air between 0 ppm and 1000 ppb, an appropriate span gas would be 800 ppb.

We strongly recommend that span calibration be carried out with NO span gas. Alternatively it is possible to use NO2 gas in a gas phase titration (GPT) calibration system (see Section 10.5).

Even though NO gas mixed into in nitrogen gas (N2) could be used as a span gas, the matrix of the balance gas is different and may cause interference problems or yield incorrect calibrations.

Teledyne Analytical Instruments

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Page 195
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Teledyne 9110T instruction manual Calibration Gases, Zero Air, Span Gas, Example