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Original Articles

Standard Reference Gases and Analytical Procedures for Use in Gas Turbine Exhaust Measurements

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Pages 1158-1162 | Published online: 13 Mar 2012
 

Abstract

This paper is directed to people who are involved in the measurement of gas turbine exhaust emissions and as a consequence in the establishment of standard reference gases and attendant analytical procedures.

Several problems exist in connection with the establishment of these standards:

A number of standard reference gases have been developed by the National Bureau of Standards for use in the automotive industry which are also suitable for gas turbine exhaust measurements. However, there is a need for additional standard reference materials such as NO in nitrogen, intermediate levels of CO2 in air, and higher concentrations of CO in nitrogen and propane in air.

There is difficulty in maintaining certain reference materials with confidence in assay, particularly due to instability in the cylinder.

Instrumental operational problems with flame ionization detector type units exist. Of particular importance is the difference in response per carbon atom in different organic molecules and the difference in response of a test sample as a function of the oxygen content of the sample.

Instrumental method problems such as converter efficiency in chemiluminescence units measuring NO2 and calibration techniques involving CO to CH4 conversion, also must be considered.

A number of problems occur in the use of wet chemical reference methods such as the phenoldisulfonic acid method for the determination of NOx. These include both efficiency of collection, conversion of NO to NO2, and subsequent analysis.

This paper considers the development of standards for the measurement of NOx, CO, CO2, total hydrocarbons, and O2 and reviews the state-of-the-art with respect to these problems and their resolution.

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