Removing The Concentric Glass Nebuliser; Removing Solids From The Nebuliser - Thermo Scientific iCAP 6000 Series Maintenance Manual

Icp-oes spectrometer
Hide thumbs Also See for iCAP 6000 Series:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

iCAP Customer Training Manual

8.5 Removing the concentric glass nebuliser

Remove the sample capillary by pulling the small white Teflon stopper that attaches
it to the back of the nebuliser.
Remove the nebuliser carefully out of the spray chamber using a rotation motion at
the same time as pulling it out.
Note: Be very careful not to dislodge the O-rings as you remove the
nebuliser. The O-rings are difficult to replace.

8.6 Removing solids from the nebuliser

If solids inside the nebuliser are interfering with performance of the system, the
steps described below will generally remove them and provide normal operation.
8.6.1 To rinse the nebuliser
Introduce a rinsing agent into the shell, either from the gas input or the nozzle (a
squeeze bottle works well in both cases). Fill all areas previously exposed to
corrosive solutions.
Attach pressurised gas to the side-arm to expel the liquid.
Inject more rinse solution into the liquid input while the gas is flowing and allow
venture suction to draw it through the capillary.
The final rinse should use isopropyl alcohol to speed the drying process.
Repeat the treatment if you think it is necessary.
After the rinse is complete, dry the nebuliser completely
8.6.2 Particles
These operations are ranked in order of increasing aggressiveness. We recommend that
you start with the gentlest procedure and continue with more aggressive procedures as
.
required
Tap the liquid input line of the nebuliser gently against a wooden surface (or a
surface of comparable hardness) to shake the particle loose. This helps the particle
to move in the direction of increasing inner diameter. Repeat the tapping as
necessary to work the particle toward the appropriate exit orifice. Avoid extremely
.
harsh tapping
Apply compressed gas (15-30 psi) to the nozzle, forcing the gas backwards through
the annulus and the capillary (back flushing).
Note: Make sure you hold the nebuliser securely during this operation.
Gently tap or flick the shell soundly with your fingernail a few times. If this fails to
dislodge the particle, close off the liquid and gas input tubes with your fingertips.
When the pressure builds up, move your fingertip quickly off the appropriate orifice
(if something is wedged in the gas annulus, "pop" your finger off the gas input; if in
the capillary). The sudden expansion of gas should help jar the particle loose in the
direction of increasing inner diameter. Try to orient the nebuliser so that gravity
assists you.
.

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents