Two types are commonly used: fixed tungsten or silver electrodes; or disk and rod graphite electrodes. Both operate with an oil sample in the gap between them. Spectrometers use li...
Guide On the Plexiglas base we placed an aluminum plate, connected to the high voltage GND cable, while on the Plexiglas
Guide On the Plexiglas base we placed an aluminum plate, connected to the high voltage GND cable, while on the Plexiglas cylinder we inserted a graphite electrode connected to the active high
Guide By using the spectral graphite rod as an electrode, ions already present in the sample are collected, and then the spectral graphite rod is heated to release energy, producing specific spectral lines to
Guide In a potentiometric titration the end-point of the titration is determined by following the variation of the potential difference between 2 electrodes (either one indicator electrode and one reference electrode
Guide Still talking about Optical Atomic Spectrometry Focus primarily on plasmas as sources Discuss instrument design and other considerations
Guide The non-sample-carrying electrode is called the counter electrode and may be of carbon, graphite or metal. Graphite and carbon electrodes differ in their electrical and thermal conductivity.
Guide A spectrometer is any instrument used to view and analyze a range (or a spectrum) of a given characteristic for a substance (e.g., a range of mass-to-charge values as in mass spectrometry), or a
Guide Optical emission spectrometers (often called "OES or spark discharge spectrometers"), are used to evaluate metals to determine the chemical composition with very high accuracy. A spark is applied
Guide For oil analysis spectrometers, a large electric potential is set up between two electrodes. Two types are commonly used: fixed tungsten or silver electrodes; or disk and rod graphite electrodes.
Guide The operation of a spectrometer relies on four interconnected components working in sequence to produce a measurement. The process begins with the light source, which provides the
Guide Mass spectrometers produce ions from the chemical substance that is being analyzed. The mass spectrometer then uses magnetic and electric fields to measure the mass of these ions. The
Contact us today for product inquiries, custom designs, or technical support