Teledyne t320u Manuale Utente

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10. 
EPA CALIBRATION PROTOCOL  
10.1. CALIBRATION REQUIREMENTS 
If the T300 is to be used for EPA SLAMS monitoring, it must be calibrated in 
accordance with the instructions in this section. 
The USEPA strongly recommends that you obtain a copy of the publication Quality 
Assurance Handbook for Air Pollution Measurement Systems Volume 2: Part 1, Ambient 
(abbreviated, Q.A. Handbook Volume II).  This manual can be purchased from:  
  USEPA Order Number: EPA454R98004; or NTIS Order Number: PB99 129876.   
  National Technical Information Service (phone 800-553-6847) or Center for 
Environmental Research Information or the U.S. Government Printing Office at 
http://www.gpo.gov.  The Handbook can also be located on line by searching for the 
title at http://www.epa.gov.   
  Special attention should be paid to Section 2.6 of that which covers CO analyzers of 
this type.  Specific regulations regarding the use and operation of ambient CO 
analyzers can be found in Reference 1 at the end of this Section. 
A bibliography and references relating to CO monitoring are listed in Section 10.6. 
10.1.1. CALIBRATION OF EQUIPMENT - GENERAL GUIDELINES 
In general, calibration is the process of adjusting the gain and offset of the T300 against 
some recognized standard.  In this section the term dynamic calibration is used to 
express a multipoint check against known standards and involves introducing gas 
samples of known concentration into the instrument in order to adjust the instrument to a 
predetermined sensitivity and to produce a calibration relationship.   
This relationship is derived from the instrumental response to successive samples of 
different known concentrations.  As a minimum, three reference points and a zero point 
are recommended to define this relationship.   
All monitoring instrument systems are subject to some drift and variation in internal 
parameters and cannot be expected to maintain accurate calibration over long periods of 
time.  Therefore, it is necessary to dynamically check the calibration relationship on a 
predetermined schedule.  Zero and span checks must be used to document that the data 
remains within control limits.  These checks are also used in data reduction and 
validation.   
Calibration can be done by either diluting high concentration CO standards with zero air 
or using individual tanks of known concentration.  Details of documentation, forms and 
procedures should be maintained with each analyzer and also in a central backup file as 
described in Section 2.6.2 of the Quality Assurance Handbook. 
06864B DCN6314