Emerson Process Management GmbH & Co. OHG 3-11
X-STREAM XE
Instruction Manual
HASXEE-IM-HS
04/2010
3
Principles
3.3 Thermal Conductivity Measurement
Thermal conductivity is the property of a mate-
rial that indicates its ability to conduct heat.
Thermal conductivity measurement prima-
rily is used for measuring concentrations of
hydrogen (H
2
) and helium (He). These gases
are characterized by a specic thermal con-
ducitivity, differing clearly from that of other
gases (see table 3-5).
3.3.1 Principle of Operation
Tab. 3-6: Examples of Specic Thermal Conducti-
vities
3.3 Thermal Conductivity Measurement
The bridge output signal (U
Br
) is adjusted to
zero when in rest position (no gas ow). By
default the reference gas path is closed (not
own through by gas). When sample gas is
supplied, the sensors in the sample gas path
are cooled due to the thermal conductivity ef-
fect: The gas absorbs heat and carries it away
from the sensors. This tunes the Wheatstone
bridge and generates a signal proportional to
the thermal conductivity.
Additional electronics linearizes and conditi-
ons this signal to provide usefull measuring
values.Depending on application, it is possib-
le to supply a reference gas to the bridge‘s
reference side. The output signal in this case
is proportional to the difference of the thermal
conductivities of sample and reference gas.
Gas
lin mw / cm grd
50 °C
Helium He 1580
Neon Ne 516
Argon Ar 189
Krypton Kr 102
Xenon Xe 60
Radon Rn 26
Hydrogen H
2
1910
Oxygen O
2
283
Chlorine Cl
2
96,8
Sulfur Dioxide SO
2
113
Nitrogen N
2
277
Ammonia NH
3
270
Carbon Dioxide CO
2
184
Air N
2
/O
2
276
Hydrochloric Acid HCl 151
Carbon Monoxide CO 267
Methane CH
4
371
Butane C
4
H
10
185
Fig. 3-8: Wheatstone Bridge
U
Br
R
S
R
S
R
R
R
R
Sample
Reference
A Wheatstone bridge, made of 4 temperature
sensitive resistors (PT 100 sensors), is sur-
rounded by gas in a way, that each 2 sensors
are located in the sample gas stream (R
S
) and
in a reference gas stream (R
R
), Fig. 3-8.