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is the ideal
instrument for precise measurement and
quantification of petroleum hydrocarbons dissolved
in water and/or as vapor.
The PetroCheck PHA is designed to meet rigorous
field monitoring requirements and has proven itself
in industrial, off-shore oil platform and remote
field operation applications, while eliminating
delays and costs associated with typical laboratory
testing.
The PetroCheck PHA comes in two models:
PetroCheck PHA-100Plus
This portable instrument measures petroleum
hydrocarbons in water and vapor in the field. In the
analytical mode, it gives fast and accurate
quantitative data for petroleum hydrocarbons in
water and vapor, and correlates very well with lab
gas chromatographic analysis. In the screening mode,
it offers fast relative data on petroleum
hydrocarbon contamination, (accurately tracking
field gas chromatograph data for TPH) and responds
strongly to BTEX components. Typical applications
include: remediation monitoring, site assessment,
well plume monitoring, storm/waste water monitoring
and hydrocarbon breakthrough. The unit works equally
well for groundwater, surface water, soil gases,
bailed samples and collected samples.
The PetroCheck PHA-100Plus is being used by the
USEPA, multiple Departments of
Environmental Protection and private field
monitoring companies in the USA and Europe.
PetroCheck PHA-100WL
The PetroCheck PHA-100WL is specially modified for
use in monitoring water produced on offshore oil
platforms. The PHA-100WL provides excellent
correlation to EPA Methods 418, 413 and 1664. The
PHA-100WL is pre-calibrated to a known sample and
shipped to the field with a calibration chart that
the operator uses to determine petroleum hydrocarbon
concentration of produced water samples. This
instrument eliminates the need for sample
preparation using banned or dangerous solvents.
Currently, many oil companies in the Gulf of Mexico
are switching to the PHA-100WL for water
applications where the traditional Infrared
spectrometer (IR) method has been used. The
PHA-100WL eliminates the need to use FREON 113, or
other solvents, to extract THP from solutions for
infrared analysis.
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