Hydrocarbon gas monitor

Hydrocarbon gas monitor is an instrument for detecting the concentration of hydrocarbons in the environment. It can be used in the petroleum, chemical, pharmaceutical, coal, and environmental industries to detect the concentration of hydrocarbons to ensure production safety and environmental protection.
What are hydrocarbons?
Hydrocarbon gas is hydrocarbons, a flammable and harmful gas that arises from the combustion of gasoline and diesel fuel. It is used to produce gas mixtures in addition to applications in the refrigeration industry, surface treatment and catalyst production.
Hydrocarbon gas applications
In addition to the refrigeration industry, hydrocarbon gas has the following applications:
1, industrial field: Hydrogen is an important raw material for industries such as chemical and steel, and can also be used in industrial processes such as oil refining, fertilizer and metallurgy. With the requirement of carbon neutrality, hydrogen in the industrial field will be gradually shifted from fossil fuel production to renewable energy production to achieve decarbonization.
2、Transportation field: Hydrogen energy can be converted into power through fuel cells or hydrogen internal combustion engines to drive cars, buses, trucks, trains, ships, airplanes and other means of transportation. The advantages of hydrogen energy in the field of transportation are clean and low carbon, long range, and short refueling time.
3、Building field: Hydrogen energy can be mixed with natural gas and delivered to building terminals through the existing natural gas pipeline network for heating, hot water, cooking and so on. Hydrogen energy can also be used to provide electricity and heat to the building through fuel cells, realizing cogeneration and improving energy efficiency and reliability.
4. Electricity field: Hydrogen energy can be used as a new form of energy storage to solve the problem of intermittency and instability of renewable energy. Hydrogen is produced through electrolysis of water and stored in the form of high-pressure gaseous state, low-temperature liquid state or solid material; during the peak period of electricity consumption or emergencies, the stored hydrogen will then be used to generate electricity through a fuel cell or hydrogen turbine, and be incorporated into the public power grid or distributed network.