Your right, I believe that this is an extremely difficult problem.
I have spent the past number of weeks contacting suppliers about calibrating these sensors and have received no definitive answer.
Therefore I am putting forward the following logic argument for not calibrating the UV sensors and run totalisers.
1) Calibration of the sensor.
Calibration of the sensor would have to deal with not only UV intensity over the expected range of the lamp(s), it would also have to deal with the UV light intensity within the narrow band around the 254 nm mark.
The calibration device would have to be able to produce an accurate 254 nm light source at a minimum of 3 intensity points (0, 30,000, 55,000 mW/cm2/s), to prove linearity and accuracy throughout the expected range of the sensor.
In addition the transmission medium (air/water/quartz) and the distance from the calibrated UV source would be critical to the calibration process.
Therefore the sensor and calibration device would both have to be able to operate throughout the expected
2) The UV intensity measurement is a single point measurement within the UV chamber. Therefore to show that it is representative of the entire chamber you would have to prove that the UV intensity is within the chamber is uniform and that the water flow through the chamber is also homogeneous (as UV intensity is measured as mW/cm2/s).
I truly believe that would be a completely impractical task.
3) Once all this is accomplished and the “calibrated” sensor is in position. The indicated UV intensity reading observed would be affected by many factors including:
· Water quality (colour, air bubbles, other factors effecting transmission)
· Quartz sleeve transmission ability (colourisation of quartz over long periods of time)
· Internal Chamber surface reflective capability
· Lamp temperatures (effects lamp output)
4) UV light provides germicidal protection for purified water loops, it is not a process step, it is a “nice to have” or safeguard.
Units are over sized so that they provide 30,000 mW/cm2/s at their end of lamp life of 60% intensity at design duty point (duty point based on flow).
UV Disinfection units are selected so that they are oversized in terms of their actual throughput (flow rate) verses their designed.
Failure of the UV disinfection unit UV intensity meter does not directly impact on quality, as it does not affect the performance of the UV lamp(s).
In addition, loss of UV disinfection can cause an increase in the systems bio burden but this is also affected by other parameters such as:
· Loop velocities (turbulence)
· Loop temperature
· Nutrients
· ID surface condition
· Loop design and dead legs
· Water turnover and usage
· Sanitisation practices