tesser
Materials
- May 23, 2001
- 15
This may be very obvious, but not to me I'm afraid.
I have a pump data sheet in front of me. It gives the product as crude oil with an SG of 0.752 @ 22ºC and a Vapour Pressure of 8.5 Bara at 22ºC. Under H2S concentration it gives '92250ppm v'.
My question is what does '92250 ppm v' really mean? I assume that it means ppm by volume. I have no problem with ppm w/w for liquids (or gases) or ppm v/v for gas mixtures but what does 'ppm v' for a gas in a liquid mean. Is there some sort of convention that when expressed this way it means volume of gas under standard conditions? Or does it mean the volume of gas at the temperature and pressure at the pumping condition? If standard conditions which? (NTP or MSC or Imperial).
The question arises because I was trying to work out where it fits in the NACE MR0175/ISO 15156-2 standards for materials on fluids containing H2S.
I have a pump data sheet in front of me. It gives the product as crude oil with an SG of 0.752 @ 22ºC and a Vapour Pressure of 8.5 Bara at 22ºC. Under H2S concentration it gives '92250ppm v'.
My question is what does '92250 ppm v' really mean? I assume that it means ppm by volume. I have no problem with ppm w/w for liquids (or gases) or ppm v/v for gas mixtures but what does 'ppm v' for a gas in a liquid mean. Is there some sort of convention that when expressed this way it means volume of gas under standard conditions? Or does it mean the volume of gas at the temperature and pressure at the pumping condition? If standard conditions which? (NTP or MSC or Imperial).
The question arises because I was trying to work out where it fits in the NACE MR0175/ISO 15156-2 standards for materials on fluids containing H2S.