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Original Articles

Development of a High-Temperature Subtractive Analyzer for Hydrocarbons

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Pages 696-698 | Published online: 15 Mar 2012
 

Abstract

This paper discusses the development of a high-temperature subtractive analyzer for separating the hydrocarbons present in gaseous mixtures into two categories— reactive hydrocarbons and unreactive hydrocarbons. The analyzer utilizes the ability of selected substances to absorb certain groups of hydrocarbons and their derivatives from a gas mixture and is designed for operation with a flame ion-ization detector. The body of information presented in this paper is directed to individuals concerned with the analysis of the exhaust gases of gas turbine engines or other combustion sources as stationary power plants. The analyzer grew out of an investigation of a previously reported subtractive analyzer system which operates at ambient temperature. Current state-of-the-art requirements for the accurate determination of total hydrocarbons at the concentrations present in turbine exhaust gases necessitate that sampling and measurements be conducted at elevated temperatures (325-375°F), rather than ambient temperature, to reduce or eliminate condensation and wall adsorption sampling errors. To fulfill this requirement, the sampling lines and flame ionization detector must be heated. After tests determined that the previously reported scrubber system would not remove the same hydrocarbons at elevated temperature levels as it did at ambient temperatures, an investigation of the effectiveness of various absorbents at elevated temperatures was conducted. This led to the development and test of the high-temperature subtractive analyzer concept discussed in this report. In its final form, one path of this unit contains no absorbent, the second contains a column of concentrated H2SO4 on Ultraport and a column containing PdSO4 and H2SO4 on Ultraport. The two columns are connected in series. The absorbents remove olefins, aromatics, acetylene, and oxygenated hydrocarbons but pass paraffins. As the final step in this program, a comparison of the two subtractive analyzers was made using the exhaust from a gas turbine combustion system.

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