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Mercury disolved in water

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dembous

Electrical
May 25, 2007
24
Hello all,

I am googling to find an analyzer that can measure quantity of mecury disolved in water.
Does anyone have informations on that kind of analyzer?

Thanks a lot guys.
 
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You are right IRstuff.

What I'm looking for is an in-line device that can continuously measure the traces of Hg in water.It should be able to measure down to 0.001 mg/l of hg in my water.

By the way, I am looking into the 2537 A from TEKRAN. It's supposed to be able to fill the bill. Any experience with?

Thanks.
 
According to Tekran's website, the 2537 is a mercury vapor sensor, which seems to be different than your application.

None of the other Tekran products seem to be appropriate for your application.

seems to imply that there's not much in the way of liquid monitoring

TTFN

FAQ731-376
 
Thanks all. JLSeagull, I've sent an email to EchoChem to get some more infos on their HG-Monitor 3000. Thanks a lot.

Cheers.
 
Correct IRstuff, that's what the article implies. But the thing is, TEKRAN has used its 2537A to monitor Hg in the Canadian Artic waters. It might not be exactely the same application like mine, still I've sent them an email to know more about their product. who knows!!!!

Thanks a lot.
 
My guess is that they were either measuring ambient air content or boiling the water to get vapors for the monitor unit. Most of the other applications of the 2537 shown here are measurements of ambient air.

TTFN

FAQ731-376
 
So, that might be a way. If you have a side chamber that allows you to agitate/heat the water, you might get sufficient emission of mercury to get readings.

TTFN

FAQ731-376
 
you are right IRstuff, the guy has just anwered me saying that he can't measure traces of Hg in water. The only way to do it is via a customized ($$$$) solution.

I've also (that for JLseagull) received a negative answer from EcoChem. They just focus on gases.

Thanks guys for help.
 
Dembous,
A few years back I was involved in remediating an old plant where they used Mercury cells. We pumped water out of the ground and removed Hg. Because we were unable to find an on-line analyzer I built one based on a lab style measuring cell and PLC. It measures in the low ppB range.
Simple enough for the operators to troubleshoot.
Regards
Roy
 
Dembous,
I took a look at your suggestion, it is very similar to the solution I came up with except I used a standard PLC so it was easy to connect into the control system. The measuring cells put out a significant mV that can be measured directly by the PLC without any additional electronics. It took a bit of work to get right but the end result allowed the plant to run 24 hours rather than have to have lab staff on hand. The chemicals are quite nasty, requiring a separate enclosure for the electronics.
If anyones interested further.
rmatson@noram-eng.com
Regards
Roy
 
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