Subject: Activated carbon beds
There has been some discussion of how to tell when an activated carbon bed in your gaseous pollution filter system is exhausted. I remembered Bill Lull describing this in one of his talks, so I called him to get the whole story. He had advised us to mix a handful of Purafil's (or anybody else's) potassium permanganate-saturated pellets in with the carbon when you refill the bed. Examine them when you think the bed may be reaching saturation; if they are still purple, you still have some time to go. When they turn grey, it's time to change the carbon. However, that's just a rule of thumb, because the two agents do not absorb identical sets of gases. If you want to be exact, you take out a sample of activated carbon and mail it to Purafil or wherever for analysis. (They are in Doraville, GA, at 800/222-6367.) Purafil analyses it free. If the bed is exhausted, they get to sell you some more. Another company named Extraction Systems is working on a field test for analyzing air upstream and downstream from the bed, which would be even more exact, because the purpose of installing these things is to purify the air, not to pollute the filters. They got the contract for the new National Archives building, and they come around four times a year to maintain the system. I *think* I got all that straight. Ellen McCrady, Editor Abbey Publications 7105 Geneva Dr. Austin, TX 78723 512/929-3992 Fax: 512/929-3995 *** Conservation DistList Instance 11:62 Distributed: Tuesday, January 20, 1998 Message Id: cdl-11-62-002 ***Received on Monday, 19 January, 1998