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Title: Design And Installation Of Odorizers And Odorant Monitoring Facilities
Author: Walter J. Fitzgerald
Source: 1966 Appalachian Gas Measurement Short Course
Year Published: 1966
Abstract: Let us commence this discussion by assuming that your company has recently decided to odorize, perhaps at the urging of the Utility Commission, or perhaps due to a reduction in the odor level of available gas supplies. The engineering and construction departments have completed their part of the program, and, since odorant is added to gas at a rale which is proportional to standard cubic feet of gas flow, it is not surprising that the measurement department is selected to operate. The Superintendent of Gas Measurement calls you in, explains that the company plans to odorize, and shows you the odorizer and a drum which he says in full of odorant. You ask him How do you get this odoranl into the odorizer and then into the gas? He answers, That is your problem. You have heard enough about odorant to know that it must be treated with respect, so before you reach for the funnel, you read up on the subect. The odorant manufacturers literature is helpful, and his representative will very probably visit you. His years of experience in the field enable him to answer many of your questions, and you soon learn many pertinent facts. As for equipment, there are two classifications of odorizers, evaporation by-pass, also known as absorption, and liquid injection, It turns out that you have a King Odorizer, which is a commercial absorption odorizer of vertical design.




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