Just as industrial gases are at the heart of so many industries, so too are gas analysis and control technologies.
From automotive to aerospace, energy to environment and pharmaceuticals to petrochemistry, the requirement to analyse gases and molecules is ubiquitous. And the rigours of gas analysis and control continue to escalate as the quest for purity, safety and efficacy intensifies and compliance grows ever-tighter.
As arguably the most fundamental of gases to sustain life, and yet an oxidising agent that can have negative consequences in many industrial applications, oxygen is the subject of imperative analysis for very different reasons. In some instances, such as in a medical content, that analysis is to ensure oxygen supply is at the required levels or purity; in other examples like manufacturing operations, it is to ensure it oxygen is not contaminating the process behind a product’s manufacture. In the case of the latter, by using an oxygen gas analyser capable of measuring down to ppm (parts-per-million) levels, any residual oxygen can be detected and either eradicated or counteracted.
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