Calibration Gas Selection for air contaminated samples
Posted: Thu Apr 18, 2013 12:51 am
Hi, I was hoping to get some help selecting calibration gases for a GC I'm currently setting up.
The GC is to be used to test Natural gas samples, where we are looking at the following gases.
Helium, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Methane, Carbon Dioxide, Ethane, Ethene, Propane, I-Butane, N-Butane, I-Pentane, N-Pentane, Hexane.
With samples generally consisting of 80-95% Methane, and small amounts of the other gases.
However occasionally its possible I'll receive air contaminated, or samples with high CO2 levels, which will cause matrix effect for my other gases.
I know what to do if the air contamination or CO2 contamination become very large, I just need a calibration gas where the balance of my gas is changed from methane to the contaminate.
But how do I handle calibrations when my methane/air or Methane/CO2 level become close to equal.
Is it as easy as mimicing my other calibration gases but change the methane and nitrogen level to be equal (~45% each).
Also if the range of air contamination can be anywhere from 0-99%, how many different contamination level calibration gases will I need?
The GC is to be used to test Natural gas samples, where we are looking at the following gases.
Helium, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Methane, Carbon Dioxide, Ethane, Ethene, Propane, I-Butane, N-Butane, I-Pentane, N-Pentane, Hexane.
With samples generally consisting of 80-95% Methane, and small amounts of the other gases.
However occasionally its possible I'll receive air contaminated, or samples with high CO2 levels, which will cause matrix effect for my other gases.
I know what to do if the air contamination or CO2 contamination become very large, I just need a calibration gas where the balance of my gas is changed from methane to the contaminate.
But how do I handle calibrations when my methane/air or Methane/CO2 level become close to equal.
Is it as easy as mimicing my other calibration gases but change the methane and nitrogen level to be equal (~45% each).
Also if the range of air contamination can be anywhere from 0-99%, how many different contamination level calibration gases will I need?