Mobility Spectrometer Studies on Hydrazine and Ammonia Detection
Author(s) -
Hsienchi Niu,
Gary A. Eiceman,
Andrew W. Szumlas,
John Lewis
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
41st international conference on environmental systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2011-5065
Subject(s) - hydrazine (antidepressant) , ammonia , spectrometer , environmental science , materials science , chemistry , chromatography , organic chemistry , physics , optics
An airborne vapor analyzer for detecting sub- to low- parts-per-million (ppm) hydrazine in the presence of higher concentration levels of ammonia has been under development for the Orion program. The detector is based on ambient pressure ionization and ion mobility characterization. The detector encompasses: 1) a membrane inlet to exclude particulate and aerosols from the analyzer inlet; 2) a method to separate hydrazine from ammonia which would otherwise lead to loss of calibration and quantitative accuracy for hydrazine determination; and 3) response and quantitative determinations for both hydrazine and ammonia. Laboratory studies explore d some of these features including mobility measurements mindful of power, size, and weight issues. The study recommended the use of a mobility spectrometer of traditional design with a reagent gas and equipped with an inlet transfer line of bonded phase fused silica tube. The inlet transfer line provided gas phase separation of neutrals of ammonia from hydrazine at 50°C, thus simplifying significantly the ionization chemistry that underlies response in a mobility spectrometer. Performance of the analyzer was acceptable between ranges of 30°C to 80°C for both the pre-fractionation column and the drift tube. An inlet comprised of a combined membrane with valve-less injector allowed high speed quantitative determination of ammonia and hydrazine without cross reactivity from common metabolites such as alcohols, esters, and aldehydes. Preliminary test results and some of the design features are discussed.
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