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*
I would retain the bubble device.
You have to remember that the flow rate is not critical, all you are doing is making sure that
you are putting sufficient P10 into the flow counters to compensate for leakage/diffusion
through the very thin (and somewhat porous) polymer window.
The only role of the outflow is to give you assurance that you are putting in at least slightly
more than is diffusing out, so the bubble meters are ideal for the purpose.
You want the bare minimum flow to achieve this, as P10 is really expensive.
I doubt whether you will find a rotameter capable of registering this bare minimum flow.
The bubble "meters" also have the advantage of preventing back diffusion of air into the flow
counters should the flow stop eg if the cylinder runs out, or if someone inadvertantly turns the
flow off.
Incidentally, for a stable flow the regulator output pressure should be appreciable (say 10 to
20psi), and the flow adjustment done with a needle valve (a restrictor) downstream of the
pressure regulator. Stable flow rates will not be achieved by omitting the needle valve
restrictor and attempting to adjust the rate with the pressure regulator alone.
cheers
Ritchie Sims
On 1 Jun 2010 at 3:46, M.Piranian wrote:
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Wouldn't it be easier and more accurate to take the tank volume, divide by the number of
P10 spectrometers and the time the tank lasts. That eliminates bubble size uncertainty.
mp
--- On Mon, 5/31/10, Straszheim, Warren E [M S E] <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
From: Straszheim, Warren E [M S E] <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Re: [PROBE-USERS] What's your P10 flow rate range?
To: [log in to unmask]
Date: Monday, May 31, 2010, 9:53 AM
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FWIW, I recall 20 drops per milliliter for water. I don't how bubbles correspond to ml. I would
set the flow and run it into an inverted, water-filled graduated cylinder. Supposing a bubble is
equivalent to a drop, then 2 bubbles per second would be 120 per minute or 6 ml/min. That
ain't much. I would doubt that you could find a rotameter reading that low, but I could be
wrong. Personally, the tube in liquid seems good and simple and cheap enough for me.
Warren S.
From: JEOL-Focused Probe Users List [[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Steven
Cogswell [[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Monday, May 31, 2010 8:27 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [PROBE-USERS] What's your P10 flow rate range?
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* Hi Probe folks;
I'm back again, but amazingly this time it's not because I have a technical problem. This time
it's just an easy question.
Our JEOL 733 uses some P10 gas-flow spectrometers. We have the P10 tank hooked up to
it and use one of those little "flow meters", as JEOL calls them, to see what the flow rate
through the spectrometer is. Manual says "1-2 bubbles per second" when the little glass
thingie (technical term) has alcohol in it.
I'm ambitious to replace the valve we use now to control the flow (very coarse, very crude)
with an actual useful rotameter. Problem is, I have no clue what range I should buy. If I
creak back to my old chemistry days usually they told you things like "1 drop is about 1 mL".
Rotameters are expensive and I'd like to buy one with a correct range and not be
disappointed.
So for folks who actually know what the gas flow rate is, what are you using?
Best regards,
Steven Cogswell
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