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SENSOREX
What Is pH?
pH is a measure of acidity
or alkalinity. The amount of hydrogen ions (H+) causes a liquid to
be acidic (high concentration of hydrogen ions) or alkaline (low
concentration of hydrogen ions). The pH range is measured from
0 to 14. Values below 0 or above 14 are possible but rare and cannot
be measured with our electrodes. The pH scale is derived from
the dissociation constant of water in the following equation:
H2O -> H+ + OH- = 1 x 10-14 (mol/L)2 =
Kw
(Kw is
the dissociation constant of water).

Hydrogen Ion Concentration in Moles/Liter at 25°
C
|
0 |
1.0 |
0.00000000000001 |
|
1 |
0.1 |
0.0000000000001 |
|
2 |
0.01 |
0.000000000001
|
|
3 |
0.001 |
0.00000000001
|
|
4 |
0.0001 |
0.0000000001
|
|
5 |
0.00001 |
0.000000001
|
|
6 |
0.000001 |
0.00000001 |
|
7 |
0.0000001 |
0.0000001 |
|
8 |
0.00000001 |
0.0000001
|
|
9 |
0.000000001 |
0.00001
|
|
10 |
0.0000000001
|
0.0001 |
|
11 |
0.00000000001 |
0.001
|
|
12 |
0.000000000001 |
0.01
|
|
13 |
0.0000000000001 |
0.1
|
|
14 |
0.00000000000001 |
1.0 |
pH of
Common Materials

Why is pH an Important
Measurement?
It determines product quality
in: Sugar Refining
Pulp and Paper Mills
Latex Coagulation
Photo Developing It
enhances product efficiency of: Flue
gas scrubbing Circuit Board Etching
Fermentation processes
It assures product safety Chromate and
cyanide destruct systems Potable and waste
waters Food, low pH to prevent botulism
How Can pH be
Measured?
Colorimetric Methods
- Reagent addition
- pH paper
Electrochemical Methods (pH electrodes)
A pH Measuring System Consists of:
- A pH electrode, an electrode whose
output voltage changes as the pH (hydrogen ion concentration)
changes
- A reference electrode is an
electrode whose voltage output stays constant
- A pH meter, a millivolt meter with a
special high impedance input circuit and circuits to change the
electrode's millivolts into pH unit readouts.
- Optionally, an automatic temperature
compensator, a device which senses temperature so
that the meter can correct for the effects of temperature changes.
How Does A pH Electrode Work?
- Special composition glass
senses H + and a millivoltage is generated (59.2 mV per pH unit at 25C.)
- A filling solution picks up the signal from the special pH
glass
- A pure silver wire dipped in silver chloride passes the signal
from the solution whose pH is being measured to the electrode's
cable or connector
- Sodium Ion error for solutions > pH 12.3
How Does A Reference Electrode Work?
- A porous reference junction separates the filling solution in
the electrode from the solution whose pH is to be measured.
- The filling solution's constant chloride ion concentration
generates a millivoltage at a pure silver wire with silver
chloride on it.
- The silver wire passes the signal from the solution being
measured to the electrode's cable or
connector.

Single vs. Double Junction Reference
Chemicals that cause silver to
precipitate at the reference junction will contaminate and plug
single junctions. These may be such compounds as sulfides,
mercaptans, cyanides, Iodides, and proteins. Other compounds such as
silver, lead, mercury, and other heavy metal compounds will react
with the chloride in the gel, causing a reduction in the reference
output. Selection of the proper chemistry in the lower (double)
junction will prevent or at least minimize the negative effects of
these reactive compounds.
How Does A Combination Electrode Work?
A combination electrode consists of a pH electrode and a
reference electrode built into a single body or housing. A
combination electrode therefore works like the pH and reference
electrodes combined!
How does a pH meter Work?
A pH meter takes the input
from the pH glass (high impedance mV) and the input from the
reference sensor and compares these 2 values to get a resulting
millivolt reading. The reading in mV is converted to pH by the
following guidleine:
Zero mV = pH 7
59.2mV per pH unit change
mV are + for pH <7 and mV are - for pH >7
Example of pH Circuit

Note that the pH and reference input go
into an operational amplifier (op amp) due to the very high
resistance of the pH glass. The meter will also adjust zero
and span offsets and can do automatic temperature compensation for
pH error (discussed below).
Temperature
Compensation
When measuring pH using a pH electrode the temperature error from
the electrode varies based on the Nernst Equation as 0.03pH/10C/unit
of pH away from pH7. As shown in the table below, the
error due to temperature is a function of both temperature and
the pH being measured. Note that there is
no error at pH7 and 25 Deg C. Temperature
compensation can be achieved manually or automatically. Manual
temperature compensation is usually achieved by entering the
temperature of the fluid being measured into the instruments menu
and then the instrument will display a "Temperature Compensated" pH
reading. This means that the temperature is corrected to the
value expected at 25 Deg C. Automatic temperature compensation
requires input from a temperature sensor and constantly sends a
compensated pH signal to the display. Automatic temperature
compensation is useful for measuring pH in systems with wide
variations in temperature.
pH vs. Temperature Error
Chart
| |
pH 2 |
pH 3 |
pH 4 |
pH 5 |
pH 6 |
pH 7 |
pH 8 |
pH 9 |
pH 10 |
pH 11 |
pH 12 |
|
5° |
.30 |
.24 |
.18 |
.12 |
.06 |
0 |
.06 |
.12 |
.18 |
.24 |
.30 |
|
15° |
.15 |
.12 |
.09 |
.06 |
.03 |
0 |
.03 |
.06 |
.09 |
.12 |
.15 |
|
25° |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
|
35° |
.15 |
.12 |
.09 |
.06 |
.03 |
0 |
.03 |
.06 |
.09 |
.12 |
.15 |
|
45° |
.30 |
.24 |
.18 |
.12 |
.06 |
0 |
.06 |
.12 |
.18 |
.24 |
.30 |
|
55° |
.45 |
.36 |
.27 |
.18 |
.09 |
0 |
.09 |
.18 |
.27 |
.36 |
.45 |
|
65° |
.60 |
.48 |
.36 |
.24 |
.12 |
0 |
.12 |
.24 |
.36 |
.48 |
.60 |
|
75° |
.75 |
.60 |
.45 |
.30 |
.15 |
0 |
.15 |
.30 |
.45 |
.60 |
.75 |
|
85° |
.90 |
.72 |
.54 |
.36 |
.18 |
0 |
.18 |
.36 |
.54 |
.72 |
.90 |
Note: Values in
light blue are less than .1 error and may not require temperature
compensation. Values in gray are temperature and pH in which
there is no error in pH from temperature.
How are pH Systems
Calibrated?
- The electrodes are placed in buffers. Buffers are solutions of
know, stable pH value
The commonly used buffers have pH values
of 4.01, 7.00 and 10.00 The pH values of buffers change with
changes of temperature (and so does the pH of solutions being
measured)
- First the the system's (electrode and meter together) Zero
Point is adjusted
Zero point is usually
determined with pH 7.00 buffer Ideally, a buffer is
used whose value is close to that of the material or solution
being measured A "calibrate "or "standardize" adjustment
potentiometer knob or push button on the pH meter is used to set
the system (electrode and meter together) to read the buffer's pH
value
- Next, the system's span is checked and/or adjusted. The
electrodes are rinsed and put into a second buffer
The system
should read close to the pH value of the second buffer. Most
meters have controls labeled "SPAN" or "SLOPE" which compensates
for electrodes with spans that are too short.
- The frequency of calibration is at the discretion of the user.
- NOTE: 2-point calibration is necessary to ensure
electrode works properly since a broken electrode can give
acceptable pH7 output in calibration mode.
pH Applications
Wastewater
neutralization Electroplating
Chemical
Manufacturing Circuit board etching Flue gas
scrubbers Boilers and cooling towers Pulp and paper
mfg. Food and Beverage
Pharmaceuticals inks, paints
latex Water treatment (sewage) Aquariums,
aquaculture Fermentation (wine, beer, alcohol)
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