Temperature-corrected oxygen measurements were performed by using multi-mode diode laser correlation spectroscopy at temperatures ranging between 300 and 473 K. The experiments simulate in situ monitoring of oxygen in coal-combustion exhaust gases at the tail of the flue. A linear relationship with a correlation coefficient of -0.999 was found between the evaluated concentration and the gas temperature. Temperature effects were either auto-corrected by keeping the reference gas at the same conditions as the sample gas, or rectified by using a predetermined effective temperature-correction coefficient calibrated for a range of absorption wavelengths. Relative standard deviations of the temperature-corrected oxygen concentrations obtained by different schemes and at various temperatures were estimated, yielding a measurement precision of 0.6%. © 2013 Xiutao Lou et al.
CITATION STYLE
Lou, X., Somesfalean, G., Zhang, Z., & Wu, S. (2013). Temperature-corrected oxygen detection based on multi-mode diode laser correlation spectroscopy. Journal of Spectroscopy, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/524071
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