Articles

A Portable Multi-Gas Detector Can Detect These 5 Gasses

by George Henry Publisher

You cannot run the risk of having undetected gas in your shop. This could spell disaster of the worst kind. Just as you have carbon monoxide detectors in your home, you need to ensure that your industrial facility is armed with a portable multi-gas detector to alert you of high levels of many different and dangerous substances. When looking for the right detector, consider the gas common in your industrial facility. Here are five gasses that can cause illness and death.

 

1. Acetylene

 

The chemical compound acetylene is colorless so you won’t know it’s in the air. If you’re in chemical or fuel manufacturing, you likely use this gas as a building block. Acetylene is unstable and naturally odorless. Odor is often added to it in industrial applications, but you’ll still want to play it safe with a detector that will sound an alarm if the levels get too high.

 

2. Ethanol

 

Found in the alcohol that people drink, ethanol might seem as if it’s harmless but it was also used as rocket fuel throughout World War II. It is combustible, so you do not want it seeping into your air, even if you do use it for distilling purposes. Ethanol can be found in fuel in various parts of the world, such as Brazil, so overall it isn’t a gas to which you want your personnel exposed.

 

3. Hydrogen

 

Hydrogen is nothing to be messed with, which is why you need a portable multi-gas detector to alert you of high levels in your facility. Hydrogen can detonate when it mixes with air. When in its natural form, it’s an asphyxiant that can produce poisonous gasses. Liquid hydrogen can cause frostbite and it also dissolves metal. Yeah, you don’t want hydrogen in your air at all.

 

4. Methane

 

This chemical compound is part of what is causing global warming, and when it’s released into the air, it can be combustible due to its instability and inability to handle various temperatures and pressures. People should never inhale methane gas. In addition, when exposed to open space, there is a strong chance the methane will explode.

 

5. Propane

 

Finally, propane is used in many commercial applications including heating rural building spaces. This being said, propane is not something that should be inhaled or exposed to the air for the same reasons as the other gasses listed above. If you heat your facilities with propane, work with it or offer it for sale, make certain you have a portable multi-gas detector to alert you of any rising levels.


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About George Henry Junior   Publisher

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Joined APSense since, September 27th, 2017, From Cary, IL, United States.

Created on Sep 27th 2017 01:53. Viewed 496 times.

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