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www.davinci-ls.com Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems The DVLS 3 Simply Smart Hydrogen Sensor
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Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Jul 10, 2015

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Page 1: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

www.davinci-ls.com

Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

The DVLS3 Simply Smart Hydrogen Sensor

Page 2: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Content

§  Four reasons for using H2 as a carrier gas §  Safety measures §  Hydrogen sensor §  Principle of operation and measurement §  Hardware overview §  Calibration and maintenance §  Summary §  Questions

Page 3: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

1.   Fast Analysis: §  Fast diffusion rate; 4 times

faster than N2 §  Half as viscous as helium;

higher linear gas velocity and shorter retention times

2.   High Efficiency:

§  Flattest Van Deemter curve

Reasons for using H2 as a Carrier Gas

Page 4: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

3.   Prolonged Column Life:

□  Some applications have a lower elution temperature, therefore the column life is longer

4.   Cost effective: □  3x’s less expensive than its helium equivalent □  Bottle or generator

Reasons for using H2 as a Carrier Gas

Page 5: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Reluctant to use H2 as a Carrier Gas?

§  Hydrogen is an Explosive Gas: Undetected gas leaks can lead to an explosion in the GC oven

§  LEL of hydrogen in Air is at 4%

Page 6: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Safety measures §  Monitor hydrogen usage §  Safety measures in GC hardware □  Safety Shutdown: when gas pressure set points

are not met, the valve and heater are shut off to prevent explosion

□  Flow Limiting Frit: if valve fails in open position, inlet frit limits the flow

□  Oven ON/OFF Sequence: Fan purges the oven before turning on heater to remove any collected H2

□  Explosion Test: GC designed to contain parts in case of explosion

§  Hydrogen sensor in the oven or valve box

Page 7: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Principle of Operation Hydrogen Sensor

§  Catalytic combustion by catalytized resistor or “pellister”

§  Surface of the pellet acts as a catalyst when hot

§  Exothermal oxidation of flammable gases ú  2 H2 + O2 → 2 H2O(g) + heat

§  Temperature rise results in a change in the electrical resistance

Page 8: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Principle of Measurement Hydrogen Sensor

§  Compensator pellet is identical but without catalyst

§  Compensator pellet removes the effect of environmental factors

§  Measurement circuit: a Wheatstone Bridge

8 13 March 2013

Page 9: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Gas sensitivity Hydrogen Sensor

Page 10: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Typical Zero Offset drift with Temperature Hydrogen Sensor

Page 11: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Typical long term zero offset drift Hydrogen Sensor

Page 12: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Typical long term gas sensitivity drift Hydrogen sensor

Page 13: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Hardware overview for a Hydrogen Sensor for GC applications

Page 14: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Sensor installed in the GC Oven

Transfertube through the oven wall to ensure a stable temperature

Page 15: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Automatic Switch to Nitrogen After 1% H2 detection, the carrier gas supply is switched to nitrogen. The system will maintain a flow through the column.

Page 16: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

After 1% H2 detection, the sequence will stop after the analysis. No waste of analyses or sample.

Automatic Stop Signal to GC

Page 17: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

After 1% H2 detection a choice of alarm signals:

17

Alarm messages

§  Acoustic alarm

§  Optical alarm (blinking display)

§  SMS alarm message

Page 18: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Calibration & Maintenance

§  Zero Point Calibrated Using Air

§  Alarm level Calibrated using Calibration Mixture

§  Yearly or after maintenance or repair

Page 19: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Summary (1)

§  Catalytic Pellistor gas specific sensor, linear range

of 0-2% H2 (0-50% LEL)

§  Unaffected by humidity, stable output for long

periods, more resistant to shocks and vibrations.

§  Expected lifetime: over five years

§  Long term stability drift sensitivity: less than 2mV

§  User defined alarm: optical, acoustic and/or SMS

up to 50% LEL

Page 20: Simply Smart: The Hydrogen Sensor for Chromatographic Systems

Summary (2)

§  Instrument readings: provide real time sensor

readings with alarm levels, channel states

§  Valve : High pressure 3 way solenoid valve

§  Oven operating temperature: up to 450◦C

§  Multiple Sensors: Max 4 sensors individually

controlled

§  Sensor options: temperature, barometer, level,

oxygen or hydrogen as a leakdetector.