In chemical production, food processing, warehousing and transportation, the leakage of ethanol (alcohol) gas may cause fire, explosion or personnel poisoning risks. As a key safety monitoring device, ethanol gas detector can capture gas concentration changes in real time and provide important guarantees for safety protection.
Applicable scenarios: "security tools" covering multiple industries
The application scenarios of ethanol gas detector are wide, and different types of equipment need to be matched for different scenarios, as follows:
In the field of industrial production:
Chemical workshop: The production process of ethanol as raw material or solvent (such as coating and adhesive manufacturing) requires the use of a fixed PID detector to monitor pipeline and storage tank leaks in real time, in order to avoid explosions caused by excessive concentration;
Brewery/food factory: Fermentation workshop, ethanol storage tank area, using catalytic combustion detectors to monitor high concentration leaks, while using semiconductor portable devices in the packaging workshop to ensure worker inhalation safety.
In the field of warehousing and transportation:
Ethanol warehouse: Install fixed detectors, coupled with exhaust system linkage (automatic exhaust for concentration exceeding standards), and equip portable devices at the entrance of the warehouse for personnel to detect before entering;
Logistics transportation: When transporting oil tankers and containers, use intrinsically safe (explosion-proof level Ex ia IIB T3 Ga) portable detectors to prevent leakage and potential hazards during transportation (intrinsically safe equipment can be safely used in flammable and explosive environments).
Public places and special scenarios:
Laboratory: When using ethanol as a reagent in scientific research institutions and hospital laboratories, PID portable detectors are used to accurately monitor low concentration leaks and avoid affecting the health of experimental personnel;
In the field of new energy, explosion-proof fixed detectors are required for ethanol fuel injection stations and fuel cell production workshops to monitor leaks at injection ports and pipeline joints in real time and prevent explosions when exposed to fire sources.