Measuring Purity of MEG (monoethylene glycol)
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Fiber grade MEG must comply with analytical purity tests in order to be salable. Additionally, the ion exchange columns shouldbe replaced precisely at the point of efficiency dropoff in order to avoid both column waste and impure product
.The traditional offline method for MEG quality control relies on pulling samples for lab analysis. The lab system compares thesample’s UV transmittance at a few wavelengths (220 nm, 240 nm, 275 nm, 350 nm) to that of demineralized water at thesame wavelengths. Since pure MEG has zero absorbance in the UV range, a simple principle applies: higher transmittance =higher purity. Fiber-grade MEG is required to have at least 97% transmittance at 220 nm.
The OMA system applies the same principle but with enormous advantages, including: (1) continuous analysis updating everysecond, as opposed to slow sample transport for discrete lab measurements; (2) fast response for immediately pinpointingfailure point of ion exchange column; (3) totally automated sampling system normalizes measurement by Auto Zero ondistilled water; (4) installation of system close to sampling point for convenience of process adjustment.
Measuring Purity of MEG (monoethylene glycol)