plantprowler
Chemical
- Aug 10, 2013
- 136
The old glass lined reactor we have says in its specifications that it has a tantalum plug in its top dish. This is not a plug added for repairs later but something that was provided at design.
Now I am ordering a new reactor but the vendor has not provided for a tantalum plug in the top head. I am wondering if I need to provide one and what purpose it serves?
Any thoughts?
Is it to dissipate a dangerous build up of static charges? That was my impression. But the plug is in the top dish; that's not where I suppose one would put it for static dissipation? One may like a liquid contact part?
Is it provided for some other reason?
Now I am ordering a new reactor but the vendor has not provided for a tantalum plug in the top head. I am wondering if I need to provide one and what purpose it serves?
Any thoughts?
Is it to dissipate a dangerous build up of static charges? That was my impression. But the plug is in the top dish; that's not where I suppose one would put it for static dissipation? One may like a liquid contact part?
Is it provided for some other reason?