Myron L 6Pfc and 4P User Manual

Page 44

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A. How it’s Done

Once the effect of temperature is removed, the compensated conductivity

is a function of the concentration (TDS). Temperature compensation of

the conductivity of a solution is performed automatically by the internal

processor with data derived from chemical tables. Any dissolved salt at

a known temperature has a known ratio of conductivity to concentration.

Tables of conversion ratios referenced to 25°C have been published by

chemists for decades.

B. Solution Characteristics

Real world applications have to measure a wide range of materials and

mixtures of electrolyte solutions. To address this problem, industrial

users commonly use the characteristics of a standard material as a

model for their solution, such as KCl, which is favored by chemists for

its stability.
Users dealing with sea water, etc., use NaCl as the model for their

concentration calculations. Users dealing with freshwater work with

mixtures including sulfates, carbonates and chlorides, the three

predominant components (anions) in freshwater that the Myron L

Company calls “natural water”. These are modeled in a mixture called

“442™” which the Myron L Company markets for use as a calibration

standard, as it does standard KCl and NaCl solutions.
The Ultrameter II contains algorithms for these 3 most commonly

referenced compounds. The solution type in use is displayed on the

left. Besides KCl, NaCl, and 442, there is the User choice. The benefit

of the User solution type is that one may enter the temperature

compensation and TDS ratio by hand, greatly increasing accuracy of

readings for a specific solution. That value remains a constant for all

measurements and should be reset for different dilutions or temperatures.

C. When does it make a lot of difference?

First, the accuracy of temperature compensation to 25°C determines the

accuracy of any TDS conversion. Assume we have industrial process

water to be pretreated by RO. assume it is 45°C and reads 1500 µS

uncompensated.
1.

If NaCl compensation is used, an instrument would report 1035

µS compensated, which corresponds to 510 ppm NaCl.

2.

If 442 compensation is used, an instrument would report 1024

µS compensated, which corresponds to 713 ppm 442.

The difference in values is 40%.

In spite of such large error, some users will continue to take data in

the NaCl mode because their previous data gathering and process

monitoring was done with an older NaCl referenced device.
Selecting the correct Solution Type on the Ultrameter II will allow the

user to attain true TDS readings that correspond to evaporated weight.

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