Bulletin 12 Apparatus And Methods For The Sampling And Analysis Of Furnace Gases

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
J. c. W. FRAZER E. J. HOFFMAN
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
22
File Size:
541 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1911

Abstract

The apparatus and methods described in the following pages were devised and used by the writers in connection with certain investiga- tions of the technologic branch of the United States Geological Sur- vey, especially those bearing on the improvement of furnace condi- tions and on efficiency in the use of fuel. The Bureau of Mines, which has charge of such analyses and tests of fuels as were formerly made by the technologic branch of the Sur- vey, is using the same apparatus and methods in connection with similar investigations that are being carried on at the testing plant of the bureau at Pittsburg, Pa. The furnace conditions prevailing both in small plants and in large industrial establishments in this country are frequently far from satisfactory. If such conditions are to be improved, they must be more thoroughly understood, and means must be found to insure complete combustion of the fuel, and yet to permit operation with such an excess of air as will result in the greatest efficiency. In this work the services of the chemist are indispensable. A very important problem is the determination of the small percentage of unburned combustible matter that escapes from the furnace in the flue gases. Under ordinary circumstances so little as 0.1 per cent of unburned combustible matter in a furnace gas is equivalent to about 1 per cent of the fuel used; and for the determination of such small percentages of gas more accurate and refined methods are required than have ordinarily been available heretofore. It is the purpose of this paper to describe some apparatus and methods which have proved satisfactory to those engaged in the chemical work of the investigations mentioned. While these methods and apparatus have been designed more particularly with regard to analysis of furnace gases, their use is by no means limited to that purpose. The reader will readily see their applicability to other uses in which the sampling and analysis of gases are involved.
Citation

APA: J. c. W. FRAZER E. J. HOFFMAN  (1911)  Bulletin 12 Apparatus And Methods For The Sampling And Analysis Of Furnace Gases

MLA: J. c. W. FRAZER E. J. HOFFMAN Bulletin 12 Apparatus And Methods For The Sampling And Analysis Of Furnace Gases. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1911.

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