Operating theory – Super Systems SuperOX User Manual

Page 4

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SuperOX

TM

Operations Manual

To the instrument technician, the sensor looks like a battery (see Figure 2). It displays a voltage,

EC, from which the carbon potential can be calculated. The probe thermocouple is shown next

to the sensing electrode.

Figure 2

The value of the internal resistance can be measured, as shown in Figure 3, by connecting a

shunt resistor across the sensor terminals, measuring the resultant voltage, Em, and carrying

out the simple calculation shown.

Figure 3

Operating Theory

Oxygen concentration of a conventional combustion atmosphere is measured by an in situ

zirconia sensor, which responds to oxygen according to the Nernst equation shown here.

Because the equation is logarithmic (to the base 10), the coefficient 0.0496TR is the number of

millivolts accompanying a tenfold change in concentration:

Ec= -0.02756TR log (PR /PF) millivolts

where TR is the temp in degrees Rankine and PF and PR are the % oxygen (O2) in the furnace

and the reference gas.

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