Abstract
Researchers in the Department of Mechanical Engineering seek to obtain a means to measure less than 3 mg of H2O that adheres to a metal surface as condensate. The objective is to calibrate optical reflectance measurements of an aluminum surface as a function of the condensate thickness present. Collaboration with the Hazardous Substance Research Center at Michigan State University results in the development of an indirect static headspace gas chromatographic technique capable of measuring H2O in low-milligram quantities. The technique utilizes manual headspace sampling, a megabore capillary column, and a flame ionization detector. A correlation of r2 = 0.999 is obtained for the calibration of the indirect measurement technique. The calibration of the analytical instrument demonstrates adequate precision (< +/- 50 microg at a 95% confidence interval) for such a heterogeneous sample. The calibration samples consist of a strip of aluminum metal, H2O, and pulverized calcium carbide to convert the H2O to acetylene. A scaled calibration technique is used to simplify handling trace water volumes. The surface reflectance measurements are found to correlate well (r2 = 0.935) with measurements of the condensate mass. This result facilitates the development of an optical mass-transfer measurement technique. This study focuses on the analytical method and its relationship with engineering research.
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