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Wed, 26 Jul 2006 10:13:52 +0100 |
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Hello
>Does anyone have any experience of cleaning the stainless steel
>bellows and inlet assembly of the dual inlet used on the Thermo MAT
>253 isotope MS? Our 253 has been contaminated by oil/water from the
>pneumatic system and has been out of action now for 15 months. The
>contamination was due to the failure of a gold gasket in a valve on
>the change-over assembly. Advice to keep baking the instrument may
>actually have made the situation worse by moving the contaminant,
>via un-crimped capillaries, around the inlet and into the bellows.
>However, we think that the 253 mass spectrometer itself is OK and we
>have replaced the C/O valve and capillaries. We are still getting
>large transitions of 13C and 18O when conducting zero enrichment
>between sample and reference inlet.
>The old method of cleaning stainless steel vacuum systems was to use
>hot trichloroethylene followed by isopropanol. Is it OK to still use
>this method? We have ultrasonic baths and vacuum ovens at our
>disposal. I also think a torque wrench should be used to tighten the
>gold seal valves, does anyone know a suitable torque setting?
>
>The pneumatic system on this instrument leaked like a sieve, and
>this was why oil vapour reached the valve seatings. I
>recommend anyone using oil compressors to make sure there are
>minimal leaks. Its a good idea to use a flow meter to monitor the
>air flow and allowing for a 1 Bar pressure drop across the meter. We
>have since switched to using dry nitrogen to drive the pneumatic valves.
John
John Hill
Mass Spectrometry Facility
University College London
Chemistry Department
20 Gordon St.
London
WC1H 0AJ
Tel: 020 7679 4605
Fax: 020 7679 7451
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