Emerson MicroCEM User Manual

Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
Continuous Emissions Monitor  
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
TABLE OF CONTENTS  
1-0  
a. Chemiluminescense NOX................................................................................................1-1  
c. Paramagnetic O2.............................................................................................................1-2  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Contents  
i
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
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2-0  
3-0  
ii  
Contents  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
4-0  
5-0  
6-0  
7-0  
8-0  
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Contents  
iii  
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
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LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS  
iv  
Contents  
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Instruction Manual  
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LIST OF TABLES  
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Contents  
v
Instruction Manual  
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vi  
Contents  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
PREFACE  
The purpose of this manual is to provide information concerning the components, functions, in-  
stallation and maintenance of the MicroCEM.  
Some sections may describe equipment not used in your configuration. The user should become  
thoroughly familiar with the operation of this module before operating it. Read this instruction  
manual completely.  
DEFINITIONS  
The following definitions apply to DANGERS, WARNINGS, CAUTIONS and NOTES found throughout  
this publication.  
DANGER .  
Highlights the presence of a hazard which will cause severe personal injury, death, or substantial  
property damage if the warning is ignored.  
WARNING .  
Highlights an operation or maintenance procedure, practice, condition, statement, etc. If not  
strictly observed, could result in injury, death, or long-term health hazards of personnel.  
CAUTION.  
Highlights an operation or maintenance procedure, practice, condition, statement, etc. If not  
strictly observed, could result in damage to or destruction of equipment, or loss of effectiveness.  
NOTE  
Highlights an essential operating procedure,  
condition or statement.  
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Instruction Manual  
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INTENDED USE STATEMENT  
The MicroCEM Continuous Emissions Monitor is intended for use as an industrial process meas-  
urement device only. It is not intended for use in medical, diagnostic, or life support applications,  
and no independent agency certifications or approvals are to be implied as covering such applica-  
tions.  
SAFETY SUMMARY  
If this equipment is used in a manner not specified in these instructions, protective systems may be  
impaired.  
AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL  
To avoid explosion, loss of life, personal injury and damage to this equipment and on-site property,  
do not operate or service this instrument before reading and understanding this instruction manual  
and receiving appropriate training. Save these instructions.  
DANGER.  
ELECTRICAL SHOCK HAZARD  
Do not open while energized. Installation requires access to live parts which can cause death or  
serious injury.  
For safety and proper performance this instrument must be connected to a properly grounded  
three-wire source of power.  
DANGER.  
POSSIBLE EXPLOSION HAZARD  
Do not operate without covers secure. Ensure that all gas connections are made as labeled and are  
leak free. Improper gas connections could result in explosion and death.  
P-2  
Preface  
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Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
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DANGER.  
TOXIC GAS  
This device may contain explosive, toxic or unhealthy gas components. Before cleaning or chang-  
ing parts in the gas paths, purge the gas lines with ambient air or nitrogen.  
This unit’s exhaust may contain hydrocarbons and other toxic gases such as carbon monoxide.  
Carbon monoxide is highly toxic and can cause headache, nausea, loss of consciousness, and  
death.  
Avoid inhalation of the exhaust gases at the exhaust fitting.  
Connect exhaust outlet to a safe vent using stainless steel or Teflon line. Check vent line and con-  
nections for leakage.  
Keep all tube fittings tight to avoid leaks. See Sections 2-5 for leak check information.  
WARNING.  
DEVICE HAZARDOUS AREA CERTIFICATION(S)  
Any addition, substitution, or replacement of components installed on or in this device, must be  
certified to meet the hazardous area classification that the device was certified to prior to any such  
component addition, substitution, or replacement. In addition, the installation of such device or  
devices must meet the requirements specified and defined by the hazardous area classification of  
the unmodified device. Any modifications to the device not meeting these requirements, will void  
the product certification(s).  
WARNING.  
PARTS INTEGRITY AND UPGRADES  
Tampering with or unauthorized substitution of components may adversely affect the safety of this  
instrument. Use only factory approved components for repair.  
Because of the danger of introducing additional hazards, do not perform any unauthorized modifi-  
cation to this instrument.  
Return the instrument to Rosemount Analytical Customer Service Center. See Section 8.  
CAUTION.  
PRESSURIZED GAS  
This unit requires periodic calibration with a known standard gas. It also may utilizes a pressur-  
ized carrier gas, such as helium, hydrogen, or nitrogen. See General Precautions for Handling and  
Storing High Pressure Gas Cylinders, page P-5.  
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CAUTION.  
HEAVY WEIGHT  
Use two persons or a suitable lifting device to move or carry the instrument.  
P-4  
Preface  
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Instruction Manual  
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GENERAL PRECAUTIONS FOR HANDLING AND STORING HIGH  
PRESSURE GAS CYLINDERS  
Edited from selected paragraphs of the Compressed Gas Association's "Handbook of Compressed  
Gases" published in 1981  
Compressed Gas Association  
1235 Jefferson Davis Highway  
Arlington, Virginia 22202  
Used by Permission  
1. Never drop cylinders or permit them to strike each other violently.  
2. Cylinders may be stored in the open, but in such cases, should be protected against extremes of  
weather and, to prevent rusting, from the dampness of the ground. Cylinders should be stored in the  
shade when located in areas where extreme temperatures are prevalent.  
3. The valve protection cap should be left on each cylinder until it has been secured against a wall or  
bench, or placed in a cylinder stand, and is ready to be used.  
4. Avoid dragging, rolling, or sliding cylinders, even for a short distance; they should be moved by using a  
suitable hand-truck.  
5. Never tamper with safety devices in valves or cylinders.  
6. Do not store full and empty cylinders together. Serious suckback can occur when an empty cylinder is  
attached to a pressurized system.  
7. No part of cylinder should be subjected to a temperature higher than 125°F (52°C). A flame should  
never be permitted to come in contact with any part of a compressed gas cylinder.  
8. Do not place cylinders where they may become part of an electric circuit. When electric arc welding,  
precautions must be taken to prevent striking an arc against the cylinder.  
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Instruction Manual  
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DOCUMENTATION  
The following MicroCEM instruction materials are available. Contact Customer Service Center or the lo-  
cal representative to order (See Section 8).  
748467 Instruction Manual (this document)  
748468 Instruction Manual, MicroCEM Sample Handling System  
COMPLIANCES  
This product may carry approvals from several certifying agencies. The certification marks appear on the  
product name-rating plate.  
CSA (Pending)  
P-6  
Preface  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
   
Instruction Manual  
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January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
SECTION 1  
DESCRIPTION AND SPECIFICATIONS  
1-1 OVERVIEW  
NO2 and oxygen (O2). Some of the NO2  
molecules produced are in an electroni-  
cally excited state (NO2* where the * re-  
fers to the excitation). These revert to the  
ground state, with emission of photons  
(essentially, red light). The reactions in-  
volved are:  
The MicroCEM Analyzer Module is designed  
to continuously determine the concentration of  
O2 , CO, and NOx in a flowing gaseous mix-  
ture. The concentration is expressed in per-  
cent (%) or parts-per-million (PPM).  
The sampled gas is collected from the stack  
and prepared by the Probe/Sample Handling  
System for analysis and processing by the  
Analysis Enclosure. The Analysis Enclosure  
shall be a standalone, computer-controlled  
unit, utilizing PC/104 as the system bus.  
NO2 + O3 NO2* + O2  
NO2* NO2 + red light  
The sample is continuously passed  
through a heated bed of vitreous carbon,  
in which NO2 is reduced to NO. Any NO  
initially present in the sample passes  
through the converter unchanged, and  
any NO2 is converted to an approximately  
equivalent (95%) amount of NO.  
The MicroCEM is enclosed in a rugged NEMA  
4X, IP65 type enclosure, for harsh environ-  
ment. The analysis enclosure utilizes convec-  
tion cooling with no air intake and air vents.  
The analysis enclosure is modular, general  
purpose and easily expandable. It utilizes in-  
dustry standard components such as PC/104  
boards, and modular signal conditioning mod-  
ules.  
The NO is quantitatively converted to NO2  
by gas-phase oxidation with molecular  
ozone produced within the analyzer form  
air supplied by an external source. During  
the reaction, approximately 10% of the  
NO2 molecules are elevated to an elec-  
tronically excited state, followed by imme-  
diate decay to the non-excited state,  
accompanied by emission of photons.  
These photons are detected by a photo-  
multiplier tube which produces an output  
proportional to the concentration of NOx  
in the sample.  
1-2 TYPICAL APPLICATIONS  
SCR  
Emission Compliance per EPA 40 CFR Part  
60  
Gas Turbines  
Natural Gas Fired Boilers  
Process Heaters  
1-3 THEORY OF OPERATION  
a. Chemiluminescense NOX  
To minimize system response time, an  
internal sample bypass feature provides  
high-velocity sample flow through the  
analyzer.  
The NOx analyzer continuously analyzes  
a flowing gas sample for NOx [nitric oxide  
(NO) plus nitrogen dioxide (NO2)]. The  
sum of the concentrations is continuously  
reported as NOx.  
b. Non-Dispersive Infrared (NDIR) CO  
The optical bench can selectively meas-  
ure multiple components in a compact  
design by using a unique dual optical  
bench design. Depending on the applica-  
tion, any two combinations of NDIR chan-  
nels can be combined on a single  
The MicroCEM NOx Analyzer Module  
uses the chemiluminescense method of  
detection. This technology is based on  
NO’s reaction with ozone (O3) to produce  
chopper motor/dual source assembly.  
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Other application-dependent options in-  
clude a wide range of sample cell materi-  
als, optical filters and solid state  
measured. The gas-specific wavelengths  
of the absorption bands characterize the  
type of gas while the strength of the ab-  
sorption gives a measure of the concen-  
tration of the gas component being  
measured.  
detectors. The NDIR Microflow detector  
consists of two chambers, measurement  
and reference with an interconnected path  
in which an ultra low flow filament sensor  
is mounted. During operation, a pulsating  
flow occurs between the two chambers  
which is dependent upon: sample gas ab-  
sorption, modulation by the chopper mo-  
tor and the fill gas of the detector  
chambers. The gas flow/sensor output is  
proportional to the measured gas con-  
centration. The optical bench is further  
enhanced by a novel “Look-through” de-  
tector technique. This design allows two  
detectors to be arranged in series --- ena-  
bling two different components to be  
measured on a single optical bench. The  
optical bench contains a unique eddy cur-  
rent drive chopper motor and source as-  
sembly. This design incorporates on  
board “intelligence” to provide continuous  
“self test” diagnostics.  
An optical bench is employed comprising  
an infrared light source, two analysis cells  
(reference and measurement), a chopper  
wheel to alternate the radiation intensity  
between the reference and measurement  
side, and a photometer detector. The de-  
tector signal thus alternates between con-  
centration dependent and concentration  
independent values. The difference be-  
tween the two is a reliable measure of the  
concentration of the absorbing gas com-  
ponent.  
Depending on the gas being measured  
and its concentration, one of two different  
measuring methods may be used as fol-  
lows:  
Interference Filter Correlation (IFC)  
Method  
c. Paramagnetic O2  
With the IFC method the analysis cell is  
alternately illuminated with filtered infrared  
concentrated in one of two spectrally  
separated wavelength ranges. One of  
these two wavelength bands is chosen to  
coincide with an absorption band of the  
sample gas and the other is chosen such  
that none of the gas constituents ex-  
pected to be encountered in practice ab-  
sorbs anywhere within the band.  
The determination of oxygen is based on  
the measurement of the magnetic sus-  
ceptibility of the sample gas. Oxygen is  
strongly paramagnetic, while other com-  
mon gases are not. The detector used is  
compact, has fast response and a wide  
dynamic range. The long life cell is corro-  
sion resistant, heated and may be easily  
cleaned. It has rugged self-tensioning  
suspension and is of welded non-glued  
construction.  
The spectral transmittance curves of the  
interference filters used in the MicroCEM  
analyzer and the spectral absorption of  
the gases CO and CO2 are shown in Fig-  
ure 1-1. It can be seen that the absorption  
bands of these gases each coincide with  
the passbands of one of the interference  
filters. The forth interference filter, used  
for generating a reference signal, has its  
passband in a spectral region where none  
of these gases absorb. Most of the other  
gases of interest also do not absorb within  
the passband of this reference filter.  
1-4 DETECTOR METHODOLOGIES  
The MicroCEM can employ up to three differ-  
ent measuring methods depending on the  
configuration chosen. The methods are:  
NDIR, Paramagnetic O2, Electrochemical O2,  
and Chemiluminescense.  
a. Non-Dispersive Infrared (NDIR)  
The non-dispersive infrared method is  
based on the principle of absorption of in-  
frared radiation by the sample gas being  
1-2  
Description and Specifications  
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Instruction Manual  
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The signal generation is accomplished  
with a pyroelectrical (solid-state) detector.  
The detector records the incoming infra-  
red radiation. This radiation is reduced by  
the absorption of the gas at the corre-  
sponding wavelengths. By comparing the  
measurement and reference wavelength,  
an alternating voltage signal is produced.  
This signal results from the cooling and  
heating of the pyroelectric detector mate-  
rial.  
CO2  
CO  
Absorption Band  
HC  
CO2  
CO  
3000 3200 3400 3600 3800 4000 4200 4400 4600 4800 5000 5200 5400 5600  
Wave Length (nm)  
Figure 1-1. Absorption Bands of Sample Gas and Transmittance of Interference Filters  
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Opto-Pneumatic Method  
In the opto-pneumatic method, a thermal  
radiator generates the infrared radiation  
which passes through the chopper wheel.  
This radiation alternately passes through  
the filter cell and reaches the measuring  
and reference side of the analysis cell  
with equal intensity. After passing another  
filter cell, the radiation reaches the pneu-  
matic detector.  
When the infrared radiation passes  
through the reference side of the analysis  
cell into the detector, no pre-absorption  
occurs. Thus, the gas inside the absorp-  
tion chamber is heated, expands and  
some of it passes through the flow chan-  
nel into the compensation chamber.  
When the infrared radiation passes  
through the open measurement side of  
the analysis cell into the detector, a part  
of it is absorbed depending on the gas  
concentration. The gas in the absorption  
chamber is, therefore, heated less than in  
the case of radiation coming from the ref-  
erence side. Absorption chamber gas be-  
comes cooler, gas pressure in the  
The pneumatic detector compares and  
evaluates the radiation from the measur-  
ing and reference sides of the analysis  
cell and converts them into voltage sig-  
nals proportional to their respective inten-  
sity.  
absorption chamber is reduced and some  
gas from the compensation chamber  
passes through the flow channel into the  
absorption chamber.  
The pneumatic detector consists of a gas-  
filled absorption chamber and a compen-  
sation chamber which are connected by a  
flow channel in which a Microflow filament  
sensor is mounted. This is shown in Fig-  
The flow channel geometry is designed in  
such a way that it hardly impedes the gas  
flow by restriction. Due to the radiation of  
the chopper wheel, the different radiation  
intensities lead to periodically repeated  
flow pulses within the detector.  
In principle the detector is filled with the  
infrared active gas to be measured and is  
only sensitive to this distinct gas with its  
characteristic absorption spectrum. The  
absorption chamber is sealed with a win-  
dow which is transparent for infrared ra-  
diation. The window is usually Calcium  
Fluoride (CaF2).  
The Microflow sensor evaluates these  
flow pulses and converts them into elec-  
trical pulses which are processed into the  
corresponding analyzer output.  
Absorption chamber  
CaF2 Window  
Flow channel with  
Microflow sensor  
Compensation chamber  
Figure 1-2. Opto-Pneumatic Gas Detector  
1-4  
Description and Specifications  
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Overall NDIR Method  
depending on the application and need for  
reduction of influences. Then the infrared  
radiation enters the analysis cells from  
which it is focused by filter cells onto the  
corresponding detector. The preamplifier  
detector output signal is then converted  
into the analytical results expressed di-  
rectly in the appropriate physical concen-  
tration units such as percent volume,  
ppm, mg/Nm3, etc. This is shown in Fig-  
In the case of dual-channel analyzers, the  
broadband emission from two infrared  
sources pass through the chopper wheel.  
In the case of the Interference Filter Cor-  
relation (IFC) method, the infrared radia-  
tion then passes through combinations of  
interference filters. In the case of the  
opto-pneumatic method, the infrared ra-  
diation passes through an optical filter  
MOTOR  
Light Source  
Chopper Blade  
Duplex Filter Disc  
Adapter Cell  
(high measuring range)  
Analysis Cell  
(undivided)  
Analysis Cell  
(measuring side)  
Filter Cell  
Analysis Cell  
(reference side)  
Preamplifier  
Pyroelectric Detector  
(solid-state detector)  
Filter Cell  
Gas Detector  
Preamplifier  
Chopper Blade  
Figure 1-3. Overall NDIR Method  
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b. Paramagnetic Oxygen Method  
be drawn towards the region of greatest  
magnetic field strength. The oxygen  
molecules thus exert different forces on  
the two suspended nitrogen filled quartz  
spheres, producing a torque which  
causes the mirror to rotate away from its  
equilibrium position.  
The paramagnetic principle refers to the  
induction of a weak magnetic field, paral-  
lel and proportional to the intensity of a  
stronger magnetizing field.  
The paramagnetic method of determina-  
tion of oxygen concentration utilizes nitro-  
gen filled quartz spheres arranged at  
opposite ends of a bar, the center of  
which is suspended by and free to rotate  
on a thin platinum wire ribbon in a cell.  
Nitrogen (N2) is used because it is dia-  
magnetic or repelled by a magnet.  
The rotated mirror deflects the incident  
light onto the photodetector creating an  
electrical signal which is amplified and fed  
back to a coil attached to the bar holding  
the quartz spheres, forcing the suspended  
spheres back to the equilibrium position.  
The current required to generate the re-  
storing torque to return the quartz bar to  
its equilibrium position is a direct measure  
of the O2 concentration in the sample gas.  
A small mirror that reflects a light beam  
coming from a light source to a photode-  
tector, is mounted on the platinum ribbon.  
A strong permanent magnet specifically  
shaped to produce a strong, highly inho-  
mogeneous magnetic field inside the  
analysis cell, is mounted outside the wall  
of the cell.  
The complete paramagnetic analysis cell  
consists of an analysis chamber, perma-  
nent magnet, processing electronics, and  
a temperature sensor. The temperature  
sensor is used to control a heat ex-  
changer to warm the measuring gas to  
about 55 °C. Refer to Figure 1-4.  
When oxygen molecules enter the cell,  
their paramagnetism will cause them to  
Permanent Magnet  
Platinum Wire  
Mirror  
Quartz Sphere(s)  
Wire Loop  
Light  
Source  
Photodetector  
Amplifier  
Display  
Figure 1-4. Paramagnetic Oxygen Analysis  
1-6  
Description and Specifications  
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c. Electrochemical Oxygen Method  
The electric current between the elec-  
trodes is proportional to the O2 concentra-  
tion in the sample gas being measured.  
The resultant signal is measured as a  
voltage across the resistor and thermistor,  
the latter of which is used for temperature  
compensation. A change in the output  
voltage (mV) represents oxygen concen-  
tration.  
The electrochemical method of determin-  
ing oxygen concentration is based on the  
galvanic cell principle shown in Figure  
The electrochemical oxygen sensor (Fig-  
ure 1-6) incorporates a lead and gold gal-  
vanic process with a lead anode and a  
gold cathode, using an acid electrolyte.  
NOTE  
The electrochemical O2 cell requires a  
minimum internal consumption of  
oxygen. Sample gases with an oxygen  
concentration of less than 2% could  
result in a reversible detuning of sensi-  
tivity and the output will become un-  
stable. The recommended practice is  
to purge the cell with conditioned am-  
bient air between periods of measure-  
ment. If the oxygen concentration is  
below 2% for several hours or days,  
the cell must be regenerated for about  
one day with ambient air. Temporary  
flushing with nitrogen (N2) for less than  
one hour (analyzer zeroing) will have  
no effect on the sensitivity or stability.  
Oxygen molecules diffuse through a non-  
porous Teflon membrane into the electro-  
chemical cell and are reduced at the gold  
cathode. Water is the byproduct of this  
reaction.  
On the anode, lead oxide is formed which  
is transferred into the electrolyte. The lead  
anode is continuously regenerated and,  
therefore, the electrode potential remains  
unchanged for a long time. The rate of  
diffusion and corresponding response  
time (t90) of the sensor is dependent on  
the thickness of the Teflon membrane.  
(Red)  
V out  
(Black)  
Thermistor (5)  
Resistor (6)  
(-)  
(+)  
Gold  
Lead  
Cathode (2)  
Anode (1)  
O2 + 4 H + 4 e  
2 H2O  
2 Pb + 2 H2O  
2PbO + 4 H + 4 e  
Electrolyte (3)  
(ph 6)  
Summary reaction O2 + 2 Pb  
2 PbO  
Figure 1-5. Reaction of Galvanic Cell  
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Black  
Red  
Lead Wire (Anode)  
Lead Wire (Cathode)  
Anode (Lead)  
O-Ring  
Plastic Disc  
Plastic Disk  
Resistor  
Thermistor  
Acid Electrolyte  
Sponge Disc  
Cathode (Gold Film)  
Teflon Membrane  
Figure 1-6. Electrochemical Oxygen Sensor  
1-8  
Description and Specifications  
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1-5 CENTRAL PROCESSING UNIT  
a. Embedded Enhanced Bios  
The CPU is an Embedded Pentium-like AT  
Computer in 5.75” x 8” form factor. The pe-  
ripherals integrated on board are: SVGA, 4  
serial ports and one parallel port, Fast  
Ethernet ctrl., IDE, Keyboard, Mouse, 2 USB.  
The module is built around the Intel Tillamook  
processor and is equipped with 64MB  
Award, 256KB Flash Bios.The Bios is  
immediately activated when you first turn  
on the system. The Bios reads system  
configuratio information in CMOS RAM  
and begins the process of checking out  
the system.  
SDRAM. The module also integrates one  
socket for SSD that performs like an HDD unit  
and can be used to store the operating sys-  
tem, the user’s programs and the data files.  
Other peripherals available on board are the  
Floppy disk controller, the parallel port. The  
Figure 1-7. CPU  
b. Specifications  
Architecture: ................................. PC/AT Compatible  
Dimensions: .................................. 5.75” x 8”  
Processor: .................................... Intel Tillamook processor - 266MHz  
Memory: ........................................ 64 MB SDRAM  
Ram/Rom disk: ............................. 1 x 32 pin socket (max. 288MB)  
Operating System: ........................ WinNT  
BIOS: ............................................ Standard with embedded extensions  
Interfaces: ..................................... IDE ctrl  
Floppy ctrl  
SVGA-CRT  
10/100 Mbps Fast Ethernet  
2 USB ports  
4 RS232 serial ports (one can be 485)  
Parallel port (bi-directional EPP-ECP)  
Keyboard PS/2  
Mouse PS/2  
Bus: .............................................. AT bus according to PC/104 spec.  
Power Supply: .............................. AT/ATX  
Connectors: .................................. COM1-4, SVGA, USB 1 and 2, PS/2 Mouse/Keyboard, ATX Power,  
Parallel, IDE, Floppy, and Fast Ethernet  
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1-6 ANALOG/DIGITAL I/O BOARD  
a. Automatic Calibration  
The Analog/Digital IO (ADIO) Board is an off-  
the-shelf, complete data acquisition system in  
a compact PC/104 packaging. The analog  
section contains 32 input channels, multi-  
plexed A/D converter with 16 bit resolution  
and 10uS conversion time. Input ranges are  
+/-5v or +/- 10V. It also includes on-board  
DMA support. The analog output section in-  
cludes two 12 bit D/A converters. Both sec-  
tions features simplified calibration using on  
board programmable digital potentiometer.  
The digital I/O section provides 24 digital I/O  
lines, which feature high current TTL drivers.  
The board requires only +5V from the system  
power supply and generates its own +/-15V  
analog supplies on board. The board operates  
over the Extended Temperatures range of -25  
to +85C. Figure 1-8 depicts the ADIO board  
and Figure 1-9 depicts the ADIO block dia-  
gram.  
The ADIO board features automatic cali-  
bration of both analog inputs and outputs  
for enhanced accuracy and reliability. The  
potentiometers, which are subject to tam-  
pering and vibration, have been elimi-  
nated. Instead, all A/D calibration  
adjustments are performed using an octal  
8-bit DAC. The DAC values are stored in  
an EEPROM and are recalled automati-  
cally on power up. The board includes  
three precision voltage references for  
negative full scale, zero, and positive full-  
scale. A calibration utility program pro-  
vided with the board allows you to recali-  
brate the board anytime, in both unipolar  
and bipolar modes, and store the new  
settings in EEPROM.  
Autocalibration applies to the 4 D/A chan-  
nels as well. The full-scale D/A range is  
selected with a jumper block. The analog  
outputs are fed back to the A/D converter  
so they can be calibrated without user in-  
tervention. Again, calibration settings are  
stored in EEPROM and automatically re-  
called on power-up.  
b. Analog Inputs  
The ADIO board provides split configura-  
tion capability, with more total input chan-  
nels than any other PC/104 analog I/O  
board. The board can be user-configured  
in any of three ways:  
Channels  
Format  
32 single-ended  
8 differential, 16 single-ended  
16 differential  
32  
24  
16  
Figure 1-8. ADIO Board  
1-10  
Description and Specifications  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
       
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
c. Programmable Input Ranges  
e. Analog Outputs  
A programmable gain amplifier, pro-  
grammable unipolar/bipolar range, and  
programmable 5V/10V full-scale range  
combine to give the ADIO board a total of  
10 different possible analog input ranges.  
All range settings are controlled in soft-  
ware for maximum flexibility.  
The ADIO board contains 4 12-bit analog  
outputs with autocalibration capability. Up  
to 5mA of output current per channel can  
be drawn from all channels simultane-  
ously. Both unipolar and bipolar output  
ranges are supported with jumper con-  
figuration. And on power up, all outputs  
are reset to 0V automatically.  
Full-  
scale  
Input  
Range  
Mode  
Gain  
Resolution  
Full- Output  
scale Range  
Mode  
Resolution  
Unipolar 10V  
Unipolar 5V  
Unipolar 5V  
Unipolar 5V  
Unipolar 5V  
1
1
2
4
8
1
1
2
4
8
0-10V  
0-5V  
0-2.5V  
0-1.25V 0.019mV  
0-0.625V 0.0096mV  
±10V  
±5V  
±2.5V  
±1.25V  
0.153mV  
0.076mV  
0.038mV  
Unipolar  
Unipolar  
Bipolar  
Bipolar  
10V  
5V  
10V  
5V  
0-10V  
0-5V  
±10V  
±5V  
2.44mV  
1.22mV  
4.88mV  
2.44mV  
Bipolar  
Bipolar  
Bipolar  
Bipolar  
Bipolar  
10V  
5V  
5V  
5V  
5V  
0.305mV  
0.153mV  
0.076mV  
0.038mV  
f.  
FIFO and 16-Bit Bus Interface  
An on-board 1024-byte FIFO enables the  
ADIO board to work with Windows 95 and  
NT by dramatically reducing the interrupt  
overhead. Each interrupt transfers 256 2-  
byte samples, or half the buffer, so the  
interrupt rate is 1/256 the sample rate.  
FIFO operation can be disabled at slow  
sample rates, so there is no lag time be-  
tween sampling and data availability. The  
16-bit interface further reduces software  
overhead by enabling all 16 A/D bits to be  
read in a single instruction, instead of re-  
quiring 2 8-bit read operations. The net  
result of this streamlined design is that the  
ADIO board supports gap-free A/D sam-  
pling at rates up to 200,000 samples per  
second, twice as fast as our previous  
boards.  
±0.625V 0.019mV  
d. Enhanced Trigger and Sampling Con-  
trol Signals  
The ADIO board has an extra A/D trigger  
and sample control signals in the design.  
Seven auxiliary digital I/O lines on the  
analog I/O connector provide a sam-  
ple/hold output signal, A/D trigger in and  
out lines (to enable synchronization of  
multiple boards) and external A/D clock-  
ing.  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Description and Specifications  
1-11  
       
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
AUTOCALIBRATION  
CIRCUIT  
+15V -15V  
ANALOG  
INPUTS  
DC/DC  
+15V  
16-BIT A/D  
CONVERTER  
0-31 SE  
0-15 DI  
X1,2,4,8  
PROGRAMMABLE  
GAIN AMP  
1K X8  
FIFO  
12-BIT A/D  
CONVERTERS  
ANALOG  
OUTPUTS 0-3  
TIMING AND  
CONTROL SIGNALS  
MASTER  
CONTROLLER  
ADDR  
CTRL  
82C54  
COUNTER/TIMER  
16-BIT DATA  
10 MHZ  
OSCILLATOR  
HIGH CURRENT  
8255 CIRCUIT  
DRIVE  
24 DIGITAL I/O  
PORT A  
BUFFER  
PORT B  
BUFFER  
BUFFER  
BUFFER  
PORT CH  
PC/104  
BUS  
PORT CL  
ACK/STROBE  
Figure 1-9. ADIO Block Diagram  
1-12  
Description and Specifications  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
 
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
g. Specifications  
Analog Inputs  
Number of inputs ................... 32 single-ended, 16 differential, or 16 SE + 8 DI; user selectable  
A/D resolution........................ 16 bits (1/65,536 of full scale)  
Bipolar ranges ....................... ±10V, ±5V, ±2.5V, ±1.25V, ±0.625V  
Unipolar ranges ..................... 0-10V, 0-5V, 0-2.5V, 0-1.25V, 0-.625V,  
Input bias current................... 100pA max  
Overvoltage protection .......... ±35V on any analog input without damage  
Nonlinearity............................ ±3LSB, no missing codes  
Conversion rate ..................... 200,000 samples/sec.max  
On-board FIFO ...................... 1K x 8(512 16-bit samples)  
Calibration.............................. Automatic;values stored in EEPROM  
Analog Outputs  
Number of outputs................. 4  
D/A resolution........................ 12 bits (1/4096 of full scale)  
Output ranges........................ ±5, ±10, 0-5, 0-10  
Output current........................ ±5mA max per channel  
Settling time........................... 6µS max to 0.01%  
Relative accuracy .................. ±1 LSB  
Nonlinearity............................ ±1 LSB, monotonic  
Reset ..................................... All channels reset to OV  
Calibration.............................. Automatic; values stored in EEPROM  
Digital I/O  
Main I/O ................................. 24 programmable I/O  
Input current........................... ±1µA max  
Output current........................  
Logic 0 ................................... 64mA max per line  
Logic 1 ................................... -15mA max per line  
Auxilary I/O ............................ 4 inputs, 4 outputs, optional use as trigger/control lines  
Counter/Timers  
A/D Pacer clock..................... 32-bit down counter  
(2 82C54 counters cascaded)  
Clock source.......................... 10MHz on-board clock or external signal  
General purpose.................... 16-bit down counter (1 82C54 counter)  
General  
Power supply......................... +5VD±10%@200mA typ  
Operating temperature .......... -25 to +85°C  
Weight.................................... 3.4oz/96g  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Description and Specifications  
1-13  
 
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
1-7 PCMCIA ADAPTER  
a. Features  
Dimensions  
The PCMCIA adapter board (Figure 1-10)  
supports Type I, II and III PCMCIA cards. The  
board is in full compliance with Microsoft FFS-  
II, PCMCIA V.2 and JEIDA 4.1 specifications.  
The PCMCIA socket accepts The following  
PCMCIA cards:  
Compliant with the PC/104 standard  
Compatible with AT PC/104 CPU mod-  
ules  
Functions on board  
2 PCMCIA slots  
Optional remote socket  
Type I  
Memory, Flash/SRAM/ROM  
Type II Fax, Modem, LAN, Wireless LAN,  
and SCSI  
PCMCIA features  
Supports PCMCIA V.1.0 and V.2.0  
Supports PCMCIA types I, II and III  
Supports both I/O and Memory Card  
Supports Hot insertion  
Type III ATA mass storage  
Operating Systems  
DOS and Windows and any other RTOS  
that supports PCMCIA  
Connectors  
J1 : PCMCIA 2 slots connector  
J3: PC/104 8 bit connector (XT compati-  
ble)  
J4 : PC/104 16 bit extension (AT exten-  
sion compatible).  
b. Software  
Software mappable memory windows and  
one I/O window.  
Jumperless interrupt steering from PC  
Card to system.  
Complete set of device drivers complying  
with PCMCIA V2.1 /JEIDA V4.1, running  
under MS-DOS or MS-WINDOWS:  
Figure 1-10. PCMCIA Interface  
PCMCIA socket & card services drivers  
Flash File System  
1-14  
Description and Specifications  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
       
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
1-8 MODEM  
a. Features  
V.90, 56 kbps data (560PC/104)  
The PC/104 Modular Modem is a self-  
contained modem module that provides the  
flexibility to include modem functionality into  
embedded system, with minimal engineering  
resources. The PC/104 Modular Modem is full  
featured including high-speed data and fax  
transmission. The PC/104 Modular Modems  
support both dial-up and 2-wire leased-line.  
Figure 1-11 depicts the Modem.  
V.34, 33.6 kbps data (336PC/104)  
14.4 kbps fax  
Voice playback and record  
DTMF decode  
-40oC to 85oC operation  
3.775" x 3.550" x 0.568" (with modular  
phone jack)  
3.775" x 3.550" x 0.435" (without modular  
phone jack)  
8 bit PC/104 bus type  
V.42 and MNP 2-4 error correction  
V.42bis, and MNP-5 data compression  
FCC Part 68 registered  
FCC Part 15 compliant  
2 wire leased-line and dial up support  
Industry Canada CS-03 certified  
Figure 1-11. Modem  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Description and Specifications  
1-15  
     
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
1-9 FLASH DRIVE  
Figure 1-12. 128MB Flash Drive  
a. Specifications  
System Performance  
All values quoted are typical at ambient temperature and nominal supply voltage unless otherwise  
stated.  
All performance timing assumes the controller is in the default (i.e., fastest) mode.  
Start-up Time  
Sleep to Write................................ 2.5 msec max.  
Sleep To Read .............................. 2.5 msec max.  
Reset to Ready.............................. 50 msec typical, 400 msec max.  
Data Transfer Rate  
to/from host............................ 16.0 MB/sec burst  
Active to Sleep Delay .................... Programmable  
Controller Overhead  
Command to DRQ................. <1.25 msec  
Power Requirements  
All values quoted are typical at ambient temperature and nominal supply voltage unless otherwise  
stated.  
DC Input Voltage  
Commercial ................................... 3.3 V ± 5%, 5 V ± 10%  
Industrial........................................ 3.3 V ± 5%, 5 V ± 5%  
1-16  
Description and Specifications  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
     
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
Power Dissipation  
Sleep mode currently is specified under the condition that all card inputs are static CMOS levels and in  
a "Not Busy" operating state.  
The currents specified show the bounds of programmability of the product.  
Sleep ............................................. 200 µA @3.3 V  
500 µA @5.0 V  
Read.............................................. 35 mA RMS @3.3 V 50 mA RMS @5.0 V  
Write .............................................. 35 mA RMS @3.3 V 50 mA RMS @5.0 V  
Environmental Specifications  
Temperature  
Operating Commercial .......... 0°C to 60°C  
Operating Industrial .............. -40°C to 85°C  
Non-Operating Commercial .. -25°C to 85°C  
Non-Operating Industrial ...... -50°C to 100°C  
Humidity  
Operating............................... 8% to 95%, non-condensing  
Non-Operating ...................... 8% to 95%, non-condensing  
Acoustic Noise ...................... 0dB  
Vibration  
Operating............................... 15 G peak to peak max.  
Non-Operating ...................... 15 G peak to peak max.  
Shock  
Operating............................... 1,000 G max.  
Non-Operating....................... 1,000 G max.  
Altitude (relative to sea level)  
Operating/Non-Operating ..... 80,000 feet max.  
System Reliability and Maintenance  
MTBF1 ................................... >1,000,000 hours  
Preventive Maintenance ....... None  
Data Reliability ...................... <1 non-recoverable error in 10(14) bits read  
Physical Specifications  
Length............................................ 100.2mm ± 0.51mm  
Width ............................................. 69.85mm ± 0.51mm  
Thickness (Body) .......................... 9.6mm ± 5.0mm  
Thickness (Removable Edge) ....... N/A  
Weight ........................................... 160 g. max  
1 Mean Time Between Failures  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Description and Specifications  
1-17  
 
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
1-10 POCKET PC  
The Pocket PC acts as an Graphic User Interface to the MicroCEM unit.  
a. Specifications  
Processor ..................................... 133MHz 32-bit Hitachi SH3 processor  
Memory ......................................... 32MB RAM, 16MB ROM  
Display .......................................... 240 x 320 pixels LCD, Rich-color CSTN, backlit  
User Interface ............................... Pen-and-touch interface (stylus included)  
Handwriting recognition software  
On-screen keyboard  
4 user-configurable quick launch screen icons  
2 quick keys (Record and Scroll/Action)  
Notification LED  
Power ........................................... Built-in Lithium-Ion rechargeable battery  
8 hours of battery life 1  
Worldwide auto-voltage AC adapter  
Input/Output .................................. IrDA infrared port  
RS232 serial port  
USB port  
Compact Flash Type I card slot  
AC input jack  
Stereo earphone jack  
Sound ........................................... Audio speaker and microphone  
Built-in voice recorder  
Digital audio player compatible  
Other Standard Features............... USB cradle  
Serial cable  
Earphones  
Removable metal cover  
Password protected and DMI compatible  
Dimensions ................................... 5.2 × 3.1 × 0.6 in (13 × 7.8 × 1.6 cm)  
Weight .......................................... 9.1 oz (260 g) with battery  
Operating Temperature................. 32–104° F (0–40° C)  
Storage Temperature ................... 32–140° F (0–60° C)  
Humidity......................................... 90% relative humidity at 104° F (40° C)  
Figure 1-13. Pocket PC  
1-18  
Description and Specifications  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
     
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
1-11 WIRELESS LAN ADAPTER  
Wireless LAN adapter is an option to allow the user to remove the Pocket PC from the enclosure and to  
operate the MicroCEM from a distance up to 1000 feet. Figure 1-14 depicts the wireless LAN adapter.  
Figure 1-14. Wireless LAN Adapter  
a. Specifications  
Data Rate ...................................... 11 Mbps send/receive with automatic fallback for extended range  
Useful Range................................. Up to 1000 feet (300 meters) open field; 300 feet (90 meters) typi-  
cal indoor installations (intervening metal and thick concrete struc-  
tures degrade performance and range)  
Security.......................................... Supports Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) which provides 64-bit  
and 128-bit data encryption; additional security through the use of a  
32-character network system ID  
Standard Support .......................... Interoperable with 2 Mbps IEEE 802.11 Direct Sequence Spread  
Spectrum (DSSS) and 802.11b (11 and 5.5 Mbps) extension  
OS Support.................................... NDIS drivers included for Windows 95, 98, ME and NT and 2000  
Channels ....................................... Supports 11 US/Canada and 13 ETSI selectable, fully-independent  
channels  
Transmit Power ............................. 25mW typical  
Radio Frequency........................... 2.4 to 2.4835 GHz  
Power Requirement....................... PC Card: 5 VDC @ 217 mA average with 338 mA maximum on  
transmit; 215 mA continuous receive, 17 mA standby  
PCI: 5VDC @ 247 mA average with 368 mA maximum on transmit;  
245 mA continuous receive, 47 mA standby  
Status lights................................... 1 (Reports: Link, Power)  
Regulatory Approval...................... US - FCC part 15B and 15C, IC RSS-210  
ETSI - FCC part 15B, CE, ETS 300 328, ETS 300 826, C-Tick  
(Australia)  
Physical Specification.................... PC Card: PCMCIA Type II PC Card  
PCI: 32-bit, 5V Key, Full Plug-N-Play  
Antenna(s)..................................... Integrated: Printed dual diversity  
External: 2.2dBi dipole; additional options for specific installation  
needs  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Description and Specifications  
1-19  
     
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
1-12 500 WATTS POWER SUPPLY  
The 500 Watts power supply combine high performance midrange power with high power density (4.4  
watts/in 3 ),active Power Factor Correction (PFC) and high reliability to meet the requirements of commer-  
cial and industrial systems. Providing tightly regulated DC power, the power supply delivers full output per-  
formance with only 300 Linear Feet per Minute (LFM) forced air-cooling by utilizing a factory installed fan.  
Other features include remote sense, power fail, logic level inhibit, DC power good. Main channel current  
sharing is provided for redundant applications. The power supply is approved to the latest international  
regulatory standards, and displays the CE Mark.  
Figure 1-15. 500 Watts Power Supply  
a. Features  
Power Factor Correction (PFC) Meets EN61000-3-2  
Fully Regulated Outputs  
Remote Sense  
Current Share, Power Fail, and Power Good Signals  
Overtemperature, Overvoltage, and Overcurrent Protected  
Available with Metric or SAE Mountings  
Input Transient & ESD Compliance to EN61000-4-2/-3/-4/-5  
Fan Output Voltage and Optional Fan  
Optional Isolation Diodes for Parallel or Redundant Operation  
1-20  
Description and Specifications  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
     
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
1-13 MicroCEM SPECIFICATIONS  
a. Analyzer  
Power ............................................ Universal Power Supply 85 – 264 VAC, 50 – 60 Hz, + 10%, 500  
Watts Maximum at Start Up. 250 Watts Nominal  
Microprocessor.............................. Intel Pentium processor, 266MHz, 64MB RAM, PC/104 architec-  
ture, Windows NT embedded Platform  
Pocket PC...................................... 133MHz, 21 bit Hitachi SH3 processor, 32MB RAM 16MB ROM,  
240 X 320 pixels LCD, Riuch color, backlit, Wireless LAN optional  
Detectors//Number ........................ NDIR, Paramagnetic, Electrochemical, Chemiluminescense// Up to  
three in one analyzer  
Mounting........................................ Wall Mount  
Area Classification......................... General Purpose / NEMA 4X (IP65) Fiberglass Enclosure  
Ambient Range  
Temperature ......................... -30° to 50° Celsius.  
Relative Humidity................... 5 to 99%  
Inputs/Outputs  
Digital..................................... RS-485 Serial Port. (Multi-Drop Network)  
RS-232 Serial Port.  
LAN, Ethernet 10/100-BaseT  
Modem.  
Connectivity Protocols........... HTML (Web Browser) – Status, file transfer Modem/Webrowser  
TCP/IP..Modbus (In Process)  
Foundation Fieldbus (In Process)  
Analog Current Outputs......... 3 Isolated 4-20 mA DC, 500 ohms Max Load (O2, CO, NOX)  
Analog Inputs:MW, Fuel Flow  
Digital OutputsTrouble Alarm, Sample Pump on/off, Drain Pump  
on/off, Purge on/off, Calibrate on/off – 110VAC @ 1amp Dry Con-  
tact  
O2 Limit Exceed, CO Limit Exceed, NOx Limit Exceed, O2 Low  
Range, CO Low Range, NOX Low Range. - TTL: 5 VDC Max Cur-  
rent 20 mA  
Digital Inputs.......................... Process on/off, Initiate Auto Calibration  
Instrument Weight ......................... 62 lbs. Typical  
Dimensions.................................... 24“ x 20“ x 12“ (HxWxD)  
Ranges .......................................... O2: 0 –25%  
CO: 0 –100ppm Selectable to 1000ppm  
NOX: 0 – 10ppm Selectable to 1000ppm  
Sample Temperature..................... 0° C to 55° C  
Sample Flow Rate......................... .5 to 1.5 liters/min  
Warm Up Time .............................. Max 25 minutes @ low ambient temperatures  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Description and Specifications  
1-21  
   
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
Electro-  
Chemical  
O2  
Paramagnetic  
O2  
NDIR  
CO  
Chemiluminescense  
NOX  
< ± 1%1  
Linearity  
< ± 1%  
< ± 1%  
< ± 1%  
< ± 1% /day 1  
< ± 1% /day 1  
< ± 1%/day 1  
Zero Drift  
Span Drift  
Repeatability  
< ± 1% /day  
< ± 1% /day  
< ± 1%  
< ± 1% /day  
< ± 1% /day  
< ± 1%  
< ± 1% /day  
< ± 1% /day  
< ± 1%  
Response Time (t90)  
10< ± t90< ±-15  
10< ± t90< ± 15 15s< ± t90< ± 20s 15s< ±-t90< ± 20s  
Influence of Ambient  
Temperature  
(-20°C to 45°C)  
On Zero  
< ± 1%  
< ± 1%  
< ±-2%  
< ±-2%  
On Span  
< ± 1%  
< ± 1%  
< ±-2%  
< ±-2%  
b. Probe/Sample Handling  
Power ............................................ Universal Power Supply 85 – 264 VAC, 50 – 60 Hz, + 10%  
500 Watts Maximum at Start Up. 250 Watts Nominal  
Mounting........................................ Wall Mount  
Area Classification......................... General Purpose / NEMA 4X (IP65) Fiberglass Enclosure  
Ambient Range  
Temperature.......................... -30° to 50° Celsius  
Relative Humidity................... 5 to 99%  
Instrument Weight ......................... 75 lbs. Typical  
Dimensions.................................... 24“ x 24“ x 12“ (HxWxD)  
Stack Sample Moisture ................. Up to 25%  
Sample Cooler............................... Thermo Electric dual pass Chiller.  
Permeation Tube (-30° C) dewpoint.  
Customer instrument air required @ 5 L/M, -40° C dewpoint  
Max. Stack Temperature............... 500° F (Higher temperatures available by utilizing elongated  
spools)  
Stack Pressure.............................. -5 to 15 inches H2O  
Sample Flow Rate......................... 1 L/min from sample handling enclosure to Analysis enclosure  
Response Time (Max distance between Analysis Enclosure and Sample Conditioning/Probe)  
Enclosure is 300'. (Response time is 20 seconds/100' w/1/4" tub-  
ing).  
Probe Length................................. 48" length 316 SS Probe with .5 micron sintered filter. (Customer  
to cut to length in field.)  
Mounting Flange............................ Optional 4“ 150#  
Sample Pump................................ 316 SS diaphragm type  
Instrument Air Requirements......... Instrument grade air required. 15 SCFM @ 60 -100 PSIG (30 sec-  
onds 2 times per day). (Pressure Regulation by Customer.)  
1 0-10ppm NOx range is <± 3%.  
1-22  
Description and Specifications  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
     
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
SECTION 2  
INSTALLATION  
2-1 OVERVIEW  
a. Limitations  
WARNING  
ELECTRICAL SHOCK HAZARD  
POSSIBLE EXPLOSION HAZARD  
Ambient Temperature:-30° to 50° Celsius  
Do not open while energized. Do not op-  
erate without doors and covers secure.  
Installation requires access to live parts  
which can cause death or serious injury.  
(-4° to 122° F)  
Relative Humidity:5% to 99%  
b. Mounting Options  
Although the MicroCEM is enclosed in an  
environmentally sealed enclosure, it  
should be protected from direct sunlight.  
In areas subjected to harsh winter cli-  
mates, protection should be provided from  
sun, rain and snow. A corrugated awning  
or other suitable means can be provided  
to meet these conditions.  
DANGER.  
ELECTRICAL SHOCK HAZARD  
Installation and servicing of this device re-  
quires access to components that may  
present electrical shock and/or mechanical  
hazards. Refer installation and servicing to  
qualified service personnel.  
2-2 LOCATION  
The MicroCEM is designed to be installed in  
an outdoor environmental location. It is rec-  
ommended that the analyzer be located out of  
direct sunlight and direct rain/snow to the ex-  
tent possible.  
CAUTION.  
CODE COMPLIANCE  
Installation of this device must be made in  
accordance with all applicable national  
and/or local codes. See specific refer-  
ences on the installation drawing located  
in the rear of this manual.  
The MicroCEM analysis enclosure should be  
installed as near as possible to the  
probe/sample handling enclosure, in order to  
avoid low response time caused by long sam-  
ple gas lines.  
CAUTION.  
PRESSURIZED GAS  
This unit requires periodic calibration with  
a known standard gas. It also may utilizes  
a pressurized carrier gas, such as helium,  
hydrogen, or nitrogen. See General Pre-  
cautions for Handling and Storing High  
Pressure Gas Cylinders, page P-5.  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Installation  
2-1  
           
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
25.2  
640.1  
11.6  
295.3  
20.2  
513.1  
4.3  
109.2  
1.1  
1.1  
27.9  
17.9  
456.9  
TYP  
27.9  
MOUNTING  
DIMENSION  
4.9  
124.5  
SAMPLE  
CALIBRATION  
GAS 3  
1.5  
38.1  
TYP  
GAS 2  
GAS 1  
OZONE / AIR  
VENT  
25.5  
647.7  
MOUNTING  
DIMENSION  
24.6  
624.8  
KEY LOCK  
HINGE  
CLEARANCE HOLE  
FOR 3/8 BOLT  
(4 PLACES)  
1.5  
38.1  
4.9  
124.5  
TYP  
AC POWER ANALOG  
INPUT INTERFACE INTERFACE INTERFACE INTERFACE INTERFACE  
DIGITAL  
RS232  
LAN  
RS485  
PHONE  
LINE  
ANTENNA  
7.1  
180.3  
Figure 2-1. MicroCEM Outline and Mounting Dimensions  
2-2  
Installation  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
 
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
2-3 GASES  
system is used with corrosive gases, it  
must be verified that there are no gas  
components which may damage the gas  
path components.  
NOTE  
For external gas lines, the use of new tub-  
ing throughout is strongly recommended.  
The preferred type is teflon or stainless  
steel, sealed at both ends.  
The gas conditioning must meet the fol-  
lowing conditions:  
Free of condensable constituents  
a. Connection  
Free of dust above 2 µm  
Besides sample gas, the MicroCEM re-  
quires other gases for operation. In most  
cases, one or more Calibration Standards  
must be provided. These should be cylin-  
ders of gas which closely resemble the  
expected sample, both in species and  
concentrations. These calibration gases  
are normally introduced into the system  
as an input to the Sample Conditioning  
Plate Option or sample conditioning may  
be provided by others.  
Free of aggressive constituents which  
may damage the gas paths  
Temperature and pressure in accor-  
dance with the specifications  
When analyzing vapors, the dewpoint of  
the sample gas must be at least 10 °C  
below the ambient temperature in order to  
avoid the precipitation of condensate in  
the gas paths.  
An optional barometric pressure compen-  
sation feature can be supplied. This re-  
quires a pressure sensor with a range of  
800 – 1,100 hPa. The concentration val-  
ues computer by the detectors will then  
be corrected to eliminate erroneous  
measurements due to changes in baro-  
metric pressure.  
Each gas cylinder should be equipped  
with a clean, hydrocarbon free two-stage  
pressure regulator with indicating gauges  
of approximately 0 to 3000 psig (0 to 20.7  
bar) for cylinder pressure and 0 to 100  
psig (0 to 6.7 bar) for delivery pressure.  
Pressure regulators should have a metal-  
lic as opposed to elastomeric diaphragm,  
and provide for ¼ inch compression fitting  
outlet and should be LOX clean.  
The gas flow rate must be in the range of  
0.2 l/min to a maximum of 1.5 l/min. A  
constant flow rate of 1 l/min is recom-  
mended.  
NOTE  
All connections specified in the In-  
stallation Drawing, in conjunction with  
the Application Data Sheet, should be  
made.  
NOTE  
The maximum gas flow rate for par-  
amagnetic oxygen detectors is 1.0  
l/min!  
b. Conditioning  
All gases must be supplied to the ana-  
lyzer as conditioned gases! When the  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Installation  
2-3  
     
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
Figure 2-2. MicroCEM Gas Connections  
OUT  
IN  
NDIR DETECTOR  
3-WAY  
VALVE  
90003225  
FLOWMETER  
W/VALVE  
CONVERTER  
656715  
SAMPLE  
CAL  
PARAMAGNETIC  
DETECTOR  
90003311  
GAUGE  
638614  
CAL GAS 3  
CAL GAS 2  
CAL GAS 1  
OZONE AIR  
REGULATOR  
904017  
2-WAY VALVE  
MANIFOLD  
ASSEMBLY  
VENT  
CAPILLARY  
634398  
EXHAUST  
OZONE GENERATOR  
659494  
DETECTOR  
659754  
Figure 2-3. MicroCEM Flow Diagram  
2-4  
Installation  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
   
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
Sample Inlet  
½” FPT  
MicroCEM Analyzer  
Sample Handling System  
Stack  
Sample  
Flow  
Power In  
115 VAC 60Hz 5A  
Dry Contact  
Initiate Auto Calibration  
1
Electrical connections. See  
Section 2-4 and Figure 2-5.  
3
3
Instrument  
Air  
Atmospheric  
Pressure  
2
Sample From  
Analyzer  
Calibration Line  
to Analyzer  
¼” Teflon tubing. Customer supplied.  
Drain to safe location.  
3
2
1
Nitrogen  
O2 / NO  
Mid Range  
O2 / NO  
High Range  
Customer supplied.  
1
Figure 2-4. MicroCEM Installation and Test Setup Configuration  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Installation  
2-5  
 
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
tual electrical connections will be specified in  
the Application Data package. All connections  
are not necessary for every application.  
2-4 ELECTRICAL CONNECTIONS  
NOTE  
Cable length for these signals should not ex-  
ceed 3,000 feet (914 meters), to avoid exces-  
sive capacitance and corresponding signal  
distortion.  
The enclosure is a NEMA 4. All entry loca-  
tions must be sealed.  
Connect all required signal cables to the con-  
nections at the bottom of the MicroCEM. The  
cable locations are indicated on the inside  
bottom cover of the MicroCEM box. The ac-  
All electrical connections are made through  
the bottom of the MicroCEM enclosure using  
circular connectors.  
ANTENNA  
AC POWER ANALOG  
INPUT INTERFACE INTERFACE INTERFACE INTERFACE INTERFACE  
DIGITAL  
RS232  
LAN  
RS485  
PHONE  
LINE  
AC POWER INPUT – J1  
ANALOG INTERFACE – J2  
DIGITAL INTERFACE – J3  
RS232 INTERFACE - J4  
LAN INTERFACE – J5  
RS485 INTERFACE – J6  
PHONE LINE – J7  
ANTENNA – J8  
Figure 2-5. MicroCEM Electrical Connections  
2-6  
Installation  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
   
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
EXIO  
A22  
AXX  
DIAGNOSTIC OUTPUT  
J2  
J3  
J3  
VOLTAGE  
DIGITAL  
J2  
ANALOG  
AXX  
2
O
PRIMARY  
POWER  
SUPPLY A1  
4-20 mA  
CURRENT LOOPS  
CO  
NOx  
A20  
J8  
ADIO  
A3  
BACKPLANE  
A2  
ANTENNA  
RS232  
MODEM  
A5  
CPU  
A4  
EXTERNAL  
CONNECTIONS  
AXX  
O2  
J4  
J5  
J6  
P5  
LOW RANGE  
READING  
CO  
NOx  
CN16C  
CN15  
LAN  
2
O
AXX  
CO  
NOx  
OVER LIMIT  
INDICATOR  
RS485  
CN16B  
DIGITAL  
I/O  
J7  
PHONE  
J9  
J3  
J4  
AXX  
PLC  
ANALOG  
I/O  
J1  
PC-104  
PC-104  
AXX  
AC IN  
TROUBLE  
AXX  
EXTERNAL SWITCH -  
INITIATE CALIBRATION  
AXX  
EXTERNAL PROCESS  
FROM CUSTOMER  
4-20mA CURR LOOP 1  
4-20mA CURR LOOP 2  
CB1  
CIRCUIT  
BREAKER  
6A  
AXX  
SAMPLE PUMP  
DRAIN PUMP  
PURGE VALVE  
CALIBRATION VALVE  
PUMP CONTROL  
24VDC  
POWER  
AUX  
A23  
CN8  
A17  
J28  
MOISTURE DETECTOR  
J38  
A17  
P4  
BAROMETRIC  
PRESSURE  
A21  
A9  
PELTIER POWER  
FAN POWER  
TEMP SENSOR(INT)  
TEMP SENSOR(EXT)  
J1  
J2  
J3  
J18  
J5  
J2  
INTERNAL PANEL  
CONNECTIONS  
AND FUNCTIONS  
ZONE HEATER  
(PELTIER)  
J4  
J1  
J17 POCKET PC  
J11  
+5V  
A10  
RS232  
CN16A  
J48  
SYSTEM HEARTBEAT  
INDICATOR  
A11  
SPAN VALVE (SV3)  
MID VALVE (SV2)  
ZERO VALVE (SV1)  
J3  
J2  
J1  
VALVES  
MANIFOLD  
ASSEMBLY  
J3  
A12  
CALIBRATION VALVE  
ASSEMBLY  
SAMPLE VALVE (SV4)  
J1  
PMD  
A24  
A8  
P1  
P2  
J1  
J2  
2
O INPUT SENSOR  
P1  
P1  
ELECTROCHEMICAL  
DETECTOR  
(PMD OPTION)  
TEMP SENSOR  
NDIR  
A25  
DS1 (RED)  
DS2 (GRN)  
TROUBLE  
A8  
J3  
HEARTBEAT  
STEPPER MOTOR  
P5  
P2  
LIGHT BARRIER SYNC  
NDIR  
DETECTOR  
J18  
J2  
CO SIGNAL  
P1  
P4  
P3  
CO  
LIGHT SOURCE  
TEMP SENSOR  
J28  
J4  
PDD  
A25  
A18  
SAMPLE PRESS LIMIT  
OZONE PRESSURE  
P3  
SAMPLE PRESSURE  
SENSOR  
A16  
OZONE PRESSURE  
SENSOR  
A7  
PHOTODIODE  
J1  
J8  
J8  
J1  
J28  
J2  
PHOTODIODE  
DETECTOR  
THERMAL SWITCH  
TEMP SENSOR/HTR  
A14  
A13  
J10  
HI VOLTAGE  
PWR SUP -1.7KV  
J3  
OZONATOR  
A15  
CONVERTER HTR  
J4  
J9  
J38  
J4  
CONVERTER  
ASSEMBLY  
TEMP SENSOR  
THERMAL SWITCH  
J38  
Figure 2-6. MicroCEM Wiring Diagram  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Installation  
2-7  
 
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
a. AC Power  
2. Using correct crimp tool and locator,  
cycle the tool once to be sure the in-  
dentors are open. Insert contact and  
wire into locator. Squeeze tool han-  
dles firmly and completely to insure  
a proper crimp. The tool will not re-  
lease unless the crimp indentors in  
the tool head have been fully actu-  
ated.  
Connect AC power through a 10A circuit  
breaker that is to be located close to the  
MicroCEM. The circuit breaker will pro-  
vide over current protection as well as a  
means of disconnecting the power.  
Maximum power requirements will be 380  
watts, with most applications requiring  
less than this amount.  
b. Circular Connector Assembly Instruc-  
tions  
Wire Stripping  
Strip insulation from end of wire to be  
crimped. Do not cut or damage wire  
strands. Refer to table for proper strip-  
ping dimensions.  
A
3. Release crimped contact and wire  
from tool. Be certain the wire is visi-  
ble through inspection hole in contact.  
Wire Size  
Dim. A  
22O or 22M*  
.125 (3.18)  
.188 (4.77)  
.188 (4.77)  
.188 (4.77)  
20  
16  
12  
*Inactive. Not recommended for new  
design, replacement only.  
Contact Crimping  
1. Insert stripped wire into contact crimp  
pot. Wire must be visible through in-  
spection hole.  
Visual Inspection Hole  
2-8  
Installation  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
   
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
Contact Insertion  
3. Press tool against contact shoulder  
and, with firm and even pressure, in-  
sert wired contact and tool tip into  
center contact cavity. A slight click  
may be heard as metal retaining tines  
snap into place behind contact shoul-  
der.  
1. Remove hardware from plug or re-  
ceptacle and slip over wire bundle in  
proper order for reassembly.  
4. Remove tool and pull back lightly on  
wire to make sure contact is properly  
seated. Repeat operation with re-  
mainder of contacts to be inserted,  
beginning with the center cavity and  
working outward in alternating rows.  
2. Using proper plastic or metal insertion  
tool for corresponding contact, posi-  
tion wire in tip of the tool so that the  
tool tip butts up against the contact  
shoulder.  
5. After all contacts are inserted, fill any  
empty cavities with wire sealing plugs.  
Reassemble plug or receptacle hard-  
ware.  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Installation  
2-9  
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
Contact Extraction  
4. Hold wire firmly in tool and extract  
wired contact and tool. Repeat op-  
eration for all contacts to be ex-  
tracted.  
1. Remove hardware from plug or re-  
ceptacle and slide hardware back  
along wire bundle.  
2. Using plastic or metal extraction tool  
with proper color code corresponding  
to contact size, place wire in tool.  
5. Fill any empty wire cavities with wire  
sealing plugs.  
6. Reassembly plug or receptacle.  
3. Insert tool into contact cavity until tool  
tip bottoms against the contact shoul-  
der, expanding clip retaining tines.  
2-10  
Installation  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
c. Interface Connections  
Connection  
Shell  
Size  
No.  
Contacts  
Designator  
AWG  
Table  
AC Power  
J1  
J2  
J3  
J4  
J5  
J6  
J7  
J8  
12  
12  
14  
10  
8
3
22  
37  
13  
6
16  
Analog Interface  
Digital Interface  
RS232  
26, 24, 22  
26, 24, 22  
28, 26, 24  
LAN Interface  
RS485  
28, 26, 24, 22  
24, 22, 20  
24, 22, 20  
14, 12  
8
3
Phone Line (Modem)  
Antenna (Peltier Power)  
8
3
16  
3
Table 2-1. Interface Connections  
SIGNAL NAME  
DEFINITION  
PIN  
A
C
L1  
L2  
85-264 VAC, 47-440 Hz  
GND  
AC Ground  
B
Table 2-2. AC Power Connection Terminal Assignments  
SIGNAL NAME  
DEFINITION  
O2 Reading, 4-20 mA Output  
PIN  
1
2
O2CL+  
O2CL-  
COCL+  
COCL-  
3
CO Reading, 4-20 mA Output  
4
NOX+  
NOX-  
5
6
NOX Reading, 4-20 mA Output  
EXP1CL+  
EXP1CL-  
EXP2CL+  
EXP2CL-  
BAROP+  
BAROP-  
7
8
9
10  
11  
12  
External process No. 1, Current Loop input, 4-20 mA  
External process No. 2, Current Loop input, 4-20 mA  
Barometric pressure Compensator  
0-10V input  
Table 2-3. Analog Output Terminal Assignments  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Installation  
2-11  
       
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
SIGNAL NAME  
DEFINITION  
PIN  
SPUMPNO  
SPUMPC  
SPUMPNC  
DPUMPNO  
DPUMPC  
DPUMPNC  
PURGNO  
PURGC  
PURGNC  
CALNO  
1
2
3
4
5
Sample Pump Control, Dry contact, 110V 1A Rating  
Drain Pump Control, Dry contact, 110V 1A Rating  
Purge Valve Control, Dry contact, 110V 1A Rating  
Calibration Valve Control, Dry contact, 110V 1A Rating  
Trouble Indicator, Dry contact, 110V 1A Rating  
6
7
8
9
10  
11  
12  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
25  
26  
27  
28  
29  
30  
31  
32-37  
CALC  
CALNC  
TRBLNO  
TRBLC  
TRBLNC  
O2LR+  
O2LR-  
O2 Low Reading Digital output (0=LR)  
CO Low Reading Digital output (0=LR)  
NOx Low Reading Digital output (0=LR)  
Digital Input from External process  
Initiate Calibration Switch Input  
O2 Over Limit Indicator  
COLR+  
COLR-  
NOxLR+  
NOxLR-  
EXTDIG1+  
EXTDIG1-  
INCAL+  
INCAL-  
O2OL+  
O2OL-  
COOL+  
CO Over Limit Indicator  
COOL-  
NOxOL+  
NOxOL-  
NOx Over Limit Indicator  
Not Used  
Table 2-4. Digital Output Terminal Assignments  
2-12  
Installation  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
 
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
SIGNAL NAME  
DCD (pin 1)  
DSR (pin 6)  
RxD (pin 2)  
RTS (pin 7)  
TxD (pin 3)  
CTS (pin 8)  
DTR (pin 4)  
RI (pin 9)  
DEFINITION  
Data Carrier Detect Input  
PIN  
1
Data Set Ready Input  
Receive Data Input  
Request to Send Output  
Transmit Data Output  
Clear To Send Input  
Data Terminal Ready Output  
Ring Indicator Input  
Signal Ground  
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
GND (pin 5)  
Not Used  
10-13  
Table 2-5. RS-232 Interface Terminal Assignments  
SIGNAL NAME DEFINITION  
PIN  
A
B
TxD/RxD+ (pin 2)  
TxD/RxD- (pin 7)  
GND (pin 3)  
Bi-directional Data  
Ground  
C
Table 2-6. RS-485 Terminal Assignments  
SIGNAL NAME  
TxD+ (pin 1)  
TxD- (pin 2)  
DEFINITION  
PIN  
1
2
Transmit Data  
RxD+ (pin 3)  
RxD- (Pin 6)  
3
Receive Data  
Not Used  
4
5-6  
Table 2-7. LAN Interface Terminal Assignments  
SIGNAL NAME  
TIP (pin T)  
DEFINITION  
Modem Interface to Phone Line  
Not Used  
PIN  
A
RING (pin R)  
B
C
Table 2-8. Phone Line (Modem) Terminal Assignments  
SIGNAL NAME  
Vbb  
Vbb_rtn  
Gnd  
DEFINITION  
PIN  
A
B
+24VDC  
+24V Return  
GND  
C
Table 2-9. Antenna (Peltier Power) Connection Terminal Assignments  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Installation  
2-13  
         
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
2-5 ANALYTICAL LEAK CHECK  
a. Flow Indicator Method  
If explosive or hazardous gas samples are  
being measured with the MicroCEM, it is rec-  
ommended that gas line fittings and compo-  
nents be thoroughly leak-checked prior to  
initial application of electrical power, bimonthly  
intervals thereafter, and after any mainte-  
nance which involves breaking the integrity of  
the sample containment system.  
Supply air or inert gas such as nitrogen,  
at 10 psig (689 hPa), to the analyzer  
through a flow indicator with a range of 0  
to 250 cc/min. Install a shut-off valve at  
the sample gas outlet. Set the flow rate to  
125 cc/min.  
Close the outlet shut-off valve and notice  
that the flow reading drops to zero. If the  
flow reading does not drop to zero, the  
system is leaking and must be corrected  
before the introduction of any flammable  
sample gas or application of power.  
MicroCEM Analyzer  
Inlet  
Outlet  
Flow Meter  
N2  
10 psig  
(69 kPa)  
Gas Outlet  
Figure 2-7. Leak Test Flow Method  
2-14  
Installation  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
     
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
b. Manometer Method  
Close the inlet shut-off valve and, follow-  
ing a brief period for pressure equilibrium,  
verify that the height of the water column  
does not drop over a period of about 5  
minutes. If the water column height drops,  
the system is leaking and must be cor-  
rected before the introduction of any  
flammable sample gas or application of  
power.  
Install a water-filled U-tube manometer at  
the sample gas outlet. Install a shut-off  
valve at the sample gas inlet. Admit air or  
inert gas to the inlet shut-off valve until  
the analyzer is pressurized to approxi-  
mately 50 hPa. The water column will be  
about 500 mm.  
MicroCEM Analyzer  
Inlet  
Outlet  
Overpressure  
Approx. 50 hPa  
N2  
Water  
Figure 2-8. Leak Test Manometer Method  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Installation  
2-15  
   
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
2-16  
Installation  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
SECTION 3  
OPERATION  
CAUTION.  
Do not operate or service this instru-  
ment before reading and understanding  
this instruction manual and receiving  
appropriate training.  
a. Connecting Pocket PC to MicroCEM  
1. Open MicroCEM door. Refer to  
2. Plug RS232 plug into adapter lo-  
cated on front panel.  
Refer to installation drawing supplied  
with the application data package.  
3. Plug power supply cable into 5V  
adapter  
3-1 STARTUP PROCEDURE  
4. Turn Pocket PC on  
Once the MicroCEM has been correctly as-  
sembled and installed in accordance with  
the instructions in Section 2, the analyzer is  
ready for operation.  
5. In order to assure no other win-  
dows are open press the reset  
button. Reset button is located on  
the back of the pocket PC.  
Before operating the system, verify that the  
leak checks have been performed and that  
the sample handling unit is performing cor-  
rectly.  
6. Using the MicroCEM menu click on  
“programs”  
7. Click on “Connection” icon  
8. Click on “uCEM” icon.  
Apply power to the system and verify that  
sample gas is flowing.  
9. Go to tools menu and click on Mi-  
croCEM .  
NOTE  
10. Unit will display data in 3 to 5 sec-  
onds.  
A warm-up time of from 15 to 50 minutes  
is required depending on the installed  
detector(s).  
Analyzer operation can be confirmed on the  
screen of the pocket PC through the glass  
window on the door. Upon power up, the  
analyzer will perform a self-test routine.  
This test will last approximately 60 sec-  
onds.  
3-2 POCKET PC USER INTERFACE  
The MicroCEM User Interface runs on a  
Pocket-PC with Windows CE operating  
system. It communicates with the Micro-  
CEM via serial communication port. All in-  
put to the Pocket-PC is done using a  
pointing device that comes with the Pocket-  
PC.  
Figure 3-1. Pocket PC  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Operation  
3-1  
         
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
Flowmeter  
Printer  
Connector  
5V  
Connector  
Heartbeat  
LED  
VGA  
Connector  
RS232  
Connector  
Keyboard  
Connector  
Mouse  
Connector  
Trouble  
LED  
Floppy  
Connector  
Power Switch  
IDE  
Connector  
Reset  
Button  
USB  
Connector  
Figure 3-2. MicroCEM Front Panel  
3-2  
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b. Main Display  
last 1-minute average, and the last 15-  
minute average. The status column  
(Sts) indicates the status of the meas-  
urement and can be any of the values  
order of precedence. Maintenance  
mode status takes highest prece-  
dence.)  
The MicroCEM Main Display (Figure  
3-3) provides the status of the three  
emissions channels. The status in-  
cludes the current reading (updated  
approximately every 2 seconds), the  
S. = Status  
See Table 3-1.  
Drag the edge of the  
column to resize.  
Use the scrollbar to  
see full set of data.  
Tools Menu  
Provides access to all  
functionality.  
Note: Exit is only be available  
when current user has  
administrative access.  
Toolbar Buttons  
About  
Data Logs  
MicroCEM Admin  
MicroCEM Settings  
Alarms  
Figure 3-3. MicroCEM Pocket PC Display (Main Display Shown)  
STATUS  
DESCRIPTION  
Indicates that maintenance mode is active.  
Calibration in process  
Invalid Reading. Indicates that the reading is invalid due to calibration failure or sensor failure.  
Valid Reading  
M
C
I
V
P
O
Customer Process Off Line (Dry contact by customer)  
MicroCEM System Off  
Table 3-1. Status Values  
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c. MicroCEM Menu  
d. MicroCEM Alarms  
Clicking on the Tools text in the lower  
The MicroCEM Alarms dialog shows all  
the current alarms. A current alarm is  
one with an Active status of 1 (active)  
or an Acknowledged state of 0 (not ac-  
knowledged).. If the Show Historical  
Alarms checkbox is checked, all non-  
current alarms are also shown (non-  
active acknowledged alarms). Up to  
100 alarms will be shown. To see more  
than the last 100 alarms, the web  
left corner of the display activates the  
MicroCEM menu. From this menu, all  
of the MicroCEM user-interface func-  
tions can be accessed.  
based MicroCEM interface must be  
used. If one or more alarms are cur-  
rent, the most recent of them will be  
displayed on the main display. If more  
than one alarm is current “(more)” will  
be displayed after the name of the most  
recent alarm on the main window to in-  
dicate that more than one alarm is ac-  
tive. Horizontal scroll bar is be used to  
see Date and Time of the Alarms.  
On-screen keyboard is available  
at any time by clicking on the  
keyboard button.  
Figure 3-4. MicroCEM Menu  
Figure 3-5. Pocket PC Alarms Screen  
Alarms with a critical level will cause  
the System trouble output to become  
active when the alarm is active. When  
all active critical alarms are acknowl-  
edged, the System trouble output will  
become inactive.  
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ALARM NAME  
LEVEL  
Critical  
Critical  
DESCRIPTION  
O2 Calibration Failed  
CO Calibration Failed  
O2 Calibration Failed to meet the maximum Drift requirements  
CO Calibration Failed to meet the maximum Drift requirements  
NOx Calibration Failed to meet the maximum Drift require-  
ments  
NOx Calibration Failed  
Critical  
O2 High Limit  
Critical  
Critical  
Critical  
Critical  
Critical  
Critical  
Critical  
Critical  
Warning  
Warning  
Warning  
O2 Sensor reading is above the minimal acceptable limit  
O2 Sensor reading is below the minimal acceptable limit  
CO Sensor reading is above the minimal acceptable limit  
CO Sensor reading is below the minimal acceptable limit  
NOx Sensor reading is above the minimal acceptable limit  
NOx Sensor reading is below the minimal acceptable limit  
24V diagnostic input exceeds the specified maximum  
24V diagnostic input is below the specified minimum  
O2 reading is over the specified Limit  
O2 Low Limit  
CO High Limit  
CO Low Limit  
NOx High Limit  
NOx Low Limit  
24V Over Max  
24 Low Min  
O2 Emission Limit  
CO Emission Limit  
NOx Emission Limit  
CO reading is over the specified Limit  
NOx reading is over the specified Limit  
Converter temperature reading exceeds the specified maxi-  
mum  
Converter Over Temp  
Critical  
Converter Low Temp  
Zone Over Temp  
Zone Low Temp  
Critical  
Critical  
Critical  
Converter temperature reading is below the specified minimum  
Zone temperature reading exceeds the specified maximum  
Zone temperature reading is below the specified minimum  
Peltier Cooler (PDT) temperature reading exceeds the speci-  
fied maximum  
PDT Over Temp  
PDT Low Temp  
PMT Over Temp  
Critical  
Critical  
Critical  
Peltier Cooler (PDT) temperature reading is below the specified  
minimum  
PDD Chamber temperature reading exceeds the specified  
maximum  
PDD Chamber temperature reading is below the specified  
minimum  
PMT Low Temp  
Critical  
Critical  
Warm-up Time Limit  
System Warm-up process exceeded the specified time limit  
Table 3-2. Alarm Summary  
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e. MicroCEM Login  
f.  
MicroCEM Login-Current User Indi-  
cation  
The login dialog appears (Figure 3-6)  
when first requesting the MicroCEM  
Settings or MicroCEM Admin. If a valid  
user name and password are entered,  
the user logging in will have permission  
to use the MicroCEM Settings and/or  
the MicroCEM Administration (Refer to  
the User Settings page of the Micro-  
CEM Settings dialog). After logging in  
the first time, it is not required again  
until the user logs out, or is logged out  
automatically because of a period of in-  
activity (Refer to the Auto Logout page  
of the MicroCEM Administration dialog).  
When a user is logged in, the Micro-  
CEM main display will indicate the user  
name of the logged in user as shown in  
current user and the Logoff button will  
not be shown.  
Current User  
Logoff Button  
Figure 3-7. Current User Indication  
Figure 3-6. MicroCEM Login  
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3-3 MicroCEM SETTINGS  
The MicroCEM Settings dialog is only  
available to users with MicroCEM Settings  
permission. If a user is not currently logged  
in, the login dialog will be displayed. If the  
current user doesn’t have MicroCEM Set-  
tings permission, a message will be dis-  
played which reads “Permission denied”.  
When the MicroCEM Settings are invoked  
from the Tools menu or the MicroCEM Set-  
tings button, the MicroCEM Settings tabbed  
dialog is displayed. The Range page (tab)  
is displayed initially.  
a. Range  
The Range Settings page is used to set  
the range of the Emissions analog out-  
puts. The outputs support dual range  
mode. When the emission is below the  
Range 1 value, the output switches to  
Range 1 mode and the Range 1 value  
becomes the full-scale value of the out-  
put. The range indication digital output  
will change to the Range 1 state.  
Tabs allow selection of the  
MicroCEM Settings pages  
Figure 3-8. Range Settings  
When the emission is above the Range  
1 value, the output switches to Range 2  
mode and the Range 2 value becomes  
the full-scale value of the output. The  
range indication digital output will  
change to the Range 2 state. The  
Range 2 settings cannot be changed  
and are factory-set.  
NOTE  
If only one range is needed, set the  
Range 1 values to the range 2 value.  
This will disable the dual range fea-  
ture.  
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b. Auto Calibration  
c. Auto Calibration Time and Fre-  
quency  
The Auto-Calibration settings are set on  
the Auto-Calibration page of the Micro-  
CEM settings. If auto calibration is  
turned to the on position, then the user  
can select time and/or frequency of the  
auto calibration in the Auto Calibration  
Frequency tab (Section 3-3c).  
The Auto-Calibration Time and Fre-  
quency tab allows specifying time and  
frequency of the auto-calibration. Time  
field requires military time format.  
Figure 3-10. Auto Calibration Time and  
Frequency  
Figure 3-9. Auto Calibration Settings  
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d. Manual Calibration  
A dry-run Calibration may be initiated  
from the Manual Calibration page of the  
MicroCEM Settings. The results of the  
calibration will not be applied and only  
provide a dry run of the calibration. If  
desired a partial calibration may be in-  
voked for one or more of the emission  
types. While the manual calibration is  
in process, a calibration progress dialog  
will be displayed as shown in Figure  
3-26. When the manual calibration is  
completed, the results are displayed in  
the Manual Calibration Results dialog  
Calibration checkbox is checked, the  
Local Calibration valve will be used  
during the calibration rather than the  
probe Calibration valve.  
NOTE  
“Start Autocalibration now” will in-  
voke a real calibration and will apply  
new correction factor results when  
done.  
Figure 3-12. Manual Calibration Results  
Figure 3-11. Manual Calibration  
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e. Limits  
f.  
Calibration Gas  
The emission limits alarms can be set  
The Calibration Gas emissions quanti-  
ties and Gas Bottle allocation may be  
set on the Calibration Gas page of the  
MicroCEM Settings. This should be set  
whenever a Calibration Gas container  
is replaced.  
on the Limits page of the MicroCEM  
Settings. When a measured emission  
exceeds its limit, the emission will have  
a limit-exceeded status. This is indi-  
cated on the main display and on the  
Data-Logs display. It is also indicated  
in the limit exceeded digital output.  
Place the span gas value of the par-  
ticular gas cylinder in the span column.  
I mid calibration gas can also be  
hooked up the MicroCEM. Insert its  
span gas value in the mid span boxes.  
If a dual range is used use the Mid  
Span column.  
Figure 3-13. Limit Settings  
Figure 3-14. Calibration Gas Settings  
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g. Maintenance Mode  
Maintenance mode may be selected for  
any of the emission types on the Main-  
tenance Mode page of the MicroCEM  
Settings.  
Choosing maintenance mode will in-  
voke an “M” flag” onto the data. Cus-  
tomer can perform routine maintenance  
while in this setting  
Figure 3-15. Maintenance Mode Settings  
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3-4 MicroCEM FACTORY SETTINGS  
password will not be provided to the cus-  
tomer. The list of settings is shown in Ta-  
A MicroCEM Factory Settings program is  
available for use by MicroCEM technicians  
to set parameters in the MicroCEM or a  
qualified customer technician. Enter the  
Factory Settings password at the login dia-  
log to enter the Factory Settings. This  
The user must purchase a PC/104 to  
mouse and PC/104 to monitor in order to  
access the factory settings. Consult  
Rosemount for details.  
3-12  
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Calibration Setting  
O2ZeroDriftLimit  
COZeroDriftLimit  
NOXZeroDriftLimit  
OSMidDriftLimit  
COMidDriftLimit  
NOXMidDriftLimit  
O2SpanDriftLimit  
COSpanDriftLimit  
NOXSpanDriftLimit  
O2Slope  
Description  
O2 Allowed Zero Drift Limit.  
CO Allowed Zero Drift Limit.  
NOx Allowed Zero Drift Limit.  
O2 Allowed Mid Drift Limit.  
CO Allowed Mid Drift Limit.  
NOx Allowed Mid Drift Limit.  
O2 Allowed Span Drift Limit.  
CO Allowed Span Drift Limit.  
NOx Allowed Span Drift Limit.  
Default value for the O2 slope  
Default value for the O2 offset  
Default value for the CO slope  
Default value for the CO offset  
Default value for the NOx slope  
Default value for the NOx offset  
If the drift exceeds the allowed amount a drift alarm  
will occur, and the readings on the channel will no  
longer be valid until a successful calibration is com-  
pleted.  
O2Offset  
Initial values for the emissions conversion slope and  
offset used on a new system before the first Cali-  
bration is performed. These values should be set  
manually before the first auto-calibration is per-  
formed.  
COSlope  
COOffset  
NOXSlope  
NOXOffset  
O2SpanDef  
Default O2 Span Calibration Gas value  
Default O2 Mid Span Calibration Gas value  
Default CO Span Calibration Gas value  
Default CO Mid Span Calibration Gas value  
Default NOx Span Calibration Gas value  
Default NOx Mid Span Calibration Gas value  
O2MidSpanDef  
COSpanDef  
COMidSpanDef  
NOXSpanDef  
NOXMidSpanDef  
Gas1Allocation  
Gas2Allocation  
Gas3Allocation  
AutoCalFrequency  
AutoCalTime  
Purge1  
Default Gas 1 allocation  
Default Gas 2 allocation  
Default Gas 3 allocation  
Default allocation for O2/NOx/CO. 1 = Zero, 2 = Mid  
Span, 3 = Span. Example: 133 =  
O2=Zero,NOx=Span,CO=Span  
Default Auto-Calibration frequency in hours and minutes (example: 24:00).  
Default Auto-Calibration time in hours and minutes (military time).  
Default auto-calibration Purge 1 value in seconds.  
Default auto-calibration gas 1 time in seconds.  
Gas1  
Gas2  
Default auto-calibration gas 2 time in seconds.  
Gas3  
Default auto-calibration gas 3 time in seconds.  
Purge2  
Default auto-calibration Purge 2 value in seconds.  
Table 3-3. Factory Settings – Calibration  
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Description  
General Setting  
This sets the O2 % low limit, below which a limit alarm will occur.  
This sets the O2 % high limit, above which a limit alarm will occur.  
This sets the CO low limit, below which a limit alarm will occur.  
This sets the CO ppm high limit, above which a limit alarm will occur.  
This sets the NOx low limit, below which a limit alarm will occur.  
This sets the NOx ppm high limit, above which a limit alarm will occur.  
This setting is used to record the MicroCEM Serial Number.  
Percent O2 used in Diluent correction.  
O2SensorLowLimit  
O2SensorHighLimit  
COSensorLowLimit  
COSensorHighLimit  
NOXSensorLowLimit  
NOXSensorHighLimit  
CCEM Serial Number  
Diluent Percent  
This is the minimum current that must be measured by a current analog input for a  
heater/cooler/fan to be considered on. This is used for heater/cooler/fan failure de-  
tection.  
MinimumOnCurrent  
This is the maximum current that must be measured by a current analog input for a  
heater/cooler/fan to be considered off. This is used for heater/cooler/fan failure de-  
tection.  
MaximumOffCurrent  
NDIR Sync Low  
This indicates which NDIR reading is made when the sync goes from high to low:  
Reference (R) or Sample Gas (S).  
If the +24V measurement is below this level it will cause an alarm.  
If the +24V measurement is above this level it will cause an alarm.  
For calibration – The amount of time to wait after turning on a valve.  
+24V Low Limit  
+24V High Limit  
ValveOnTime  
O2EmissionLimit  
NOXEmissionLimit  
COEmissionLimit  
O2LowRange  
COLowRange  
NOXLowRange  
O2HighRange  
These limits are the default values. On the Pocket PC these values will be used  
when one of the “Defaults” buttons are pressed.  
COHighRange  
NOXHighRange  
SamplePumpOn  
1 = Sample pump is used. 0 = Sample pump not used.  
Directory where log files are saved (C:\uCEM\Logs).  
LogsDir  
Maximum time allowed for the uCEM to warm-up when it is started up. If all tem-  
perature zones are not within allowed range within this period of time, the uCEM will  
shutdown all heaters, coolers and processes.  
MaxWarmUpTime  
The full path to the file which maintains the state of the uCEM.  
(C:\uCEM\mcem.state)  
StateFile  
The IP address to use when listening for incoming connections.  
The IP Port to use when listening for incoming connections.  
100  
ServerIP  
ServerPort  
ServerTimeout  
The full path to the file which maintains the current state of the alarms.  
(C:\uCEM\alarms.state)  
AlarmsPersistFile  
Auto Log-off time in minutes  
LogoffTimeout  
The full path to the file that maintains the user list (C:\uCEM\mcem.userlist)  
UserListPersistFile  
Table 3-4. Factory Settings - General  
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a. PID Control Loop Factory Settings  
Zone heater/cooler, Converter Heater,  
PMT Heater, and PMT Photo Diode  
Cooler. Table 3-5 shows the section  
names in the INI file used for each  
temperature control loop.  
These settings can be set for each of  
the temperature control loops. The  
temperature control loops include the  
Control Loop  
Section Name  
[PIDSettings ZoneLoop]  
Zone Heater/Cooler  
Converter Heater  
PMT Heater  
[PIDSettings ConverterLoop]  
[PIDSettings PMTLoop]  
[PIDSettings PDTLoop]  
PMT Photo Diode Cooler  
Table 3-5. PID Settings – Section Names  
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PID Setting  
Description  
Proportional Gain. This parameter is set by using typical PID  
tuning methods. The P setting is mandatory and is the first pa-  
rameter to adjust. It provides a command directly proportional to  
the error.  
PSetting  
Integral Gain. This parameter is set by using typical PID tuning  
methods. The I setting is optional and is used to make small ad-  
justments to correct a small error which persists for a period of  
time.  
ISetting  
Derivative Gain. This parameter is set by using typical PID tuning  
methods. The D setting is optional. It is used to adjust the com-  
mand based on change in error. It can be used to reduce over-  
shoot, which typically occurs when the P settings is used by itself.  
This parameter tends to amplify any noise present in the input.  
DSetting  
Should be set to the typical warm-up/cool-down speed in  
°C/second when the heater/cooler is operated at 100% power.  
Increasing this value effectively decreases the Proportional, Inte-  
gral and Derivative gain. Decreasing this value effectively in-  
creases the Proportional, Integral and Derivative gain.  
MaxSpeedSetting  
Integral Reset Error. Setting used to reset Integral value when  
error is larger than this value. This parameter is used to prevent  
the integral value from building up while the error is large and  
then causing overshoot when the setpoint is reached.  
ResetIntegralError  
Maximum percent output power that can be accumulated by the  
Integral component. (0-100) The default is 10 percent.  
IntegralMaxPercent  
IntegralMinPercent  
Minimum percent output power that can be accumulated by the  
Integral component. (0-100) The default is 10 percent.  
MaxPercent  
Maximum zone output power in percent (0-100).  
Minimum zone output power in percent (0-100).  
Minimum  
MinPercent  
MinAlternationPercent  
This is the temperature setpoint, in degrees Celsius, for this tem-  
perature control loop.  
SetPoint  
If the temperature (°C) is below this value during the MicroCEM  
process (not including the warm-up phase) an alarm will occur.  
LowTempLimit  
HighTempLimit  
If the temperature (°C) is above this value during the MicroCEM  
process (not including the warm-up phase) an alarm will occur.  
If the current reading is below the maximum-off current while the  
heater is turned off, the heater has failed with a Heater Control  
failure.  
MaxOffCurrent  
MinOnCurrent  
If the current reading is below the minimum-on current while the  
heater is turned on, the heater has failed with a Heater Burnout  
status.  
Table 3-6. PID Settings – Sections Descriptions  
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3-5 MicroCEM ADMINISTRATION  
b. Auto Logoff  
The MicroCEM Administration dialog is only  
available to users with MicroCEM Admini-  
stration permission. If a user is not cur-  
rently logged in, the login dialog will be  
displayed. If the current user doesn’t have  
MicroCEM Administration permission, a  
message will be displayed which reads  
“Permission denied”. When the MicroCEM  
Administration is invoked from the Tools  
menu or the MicroCEM Administration  
button, the MicroCEM Administration  
tabbed dialog is displayed. The User Set-  
tings page (tab) is displayed initially.  
The number of minutes of inactivity af-  
ter which a user is automatically logged  
off is set on the Auto Logoff page of the  
MicroCEM Administration.  
a. User Settings  
The user settings page of the Micro-  
CEM Administration dialog allows users  
to be added, deleted or modified. Each  
user has a name, password, and per-  
mission settings. The permission set-  
tings include Settings permission that  
allows access to the MicroCEM Set-  
tings dialog, and Administrative permis-  
sion that allows access to the  
MicroCEM Administration dialog. The  
Settings permission also allows a user  
to access the MicroCEM remotely us-  
ing the web-based interface.  
Figure 3-17. Auto Logoff  
Figure 3-16. User Settings  
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3-6 MicroCEM DATA LOGS  
b. Maximum Number of Log Files  
The MicroCEM maintains a minimum of 3  
months of history in three types of data log  
files. The first type of log file is the meas-  
urement log, which contains emission  
measurements (at 1 minute intervals),  
alarm indications and maintenance mode  
indications. The second type of log file is  
the calibration log file, which contains in-  
formation on each auto calibration done.  
The third is the alarm log file, which records  
any improperly functioning hardware. The  
data will be stored in flat, ASCII, CSV  
(comma-delineated) file. This file format  
can be read directly by MS Excel and im-  
ported into many types of software applica-  
tions. The following parameters is factory  
set for each of the log file types.  
This is how many log files can be cre-  
ated. When the maximum number of  
log files is reached, the oldest file is  
overwritten when new ones are cre-  
ated.  
Emissions Log:  
Calib Log:  
Alarm Log:  
6
6
6
c. Log File Name Format  
The log file name uses the date that the  
file was created. It is of the format  
TYYYYMMDD.CSV where T is the log  
file type (E=Emissions, C=Calibration  
and A=Alarm), YYYY is the Year, MM  
is the month, and DD is the day of the  
month. For example, the file name  
E20010329.csv contains emissions  
data and was created on March 29,  
2001.  
a. Maximum Log File Size  
This is how large a log file can get (in  
bytes) before it is closed and a new log  
file is opened.  
d. Measurement Log File Format  
Emissions Log:  
Calib Log:  
Alarm Log:  
1 MB  
4000 bytes  
4000 bytes  
The log file contains data in a flat, AS-  
CII, CSV file. The following are the  
fields of the file, in order of occurrence.  
The log file size will be about 42 bytes  
per entry. 3 months of data logs will  
require about 5,443,200 bytes  
Name  
Description  
Example  
Date/Time  
O2  
Month-day-year Hours:Minutes:Seconds  
Percent O2 (percent)  
3-7-2001 10:24:57  
10.5  
12  
CO  
CO parts per million  
NOx  
NOx parts per million  
15  
CO Limit  
NOx Limit  
O2 Status  
CO Limit exceeded alarm, 0=inactive, 1=active  
NOx Limit exceeded alarm, 0=inactive, 1=active  
0
0
V
V=Valid, M=Maintenance Mode, C=Calibration in process,  
I=Invalid (calibration failed or sensor in failed state)  
CO Status  
V=Valid, M=Maintenance Mode, C=Calibration in process,  
I=Invalid (calibration failed or sensor in failed state)  
V
V
NOx Status  
V=Valid, M=Maintenance Mode, C=Calibration in process,  
I=Invalid (calibration failed or sensor in failed state)  
Table 3-7. Measurement Log File Format  
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e. Calibration Log File Format  
fields of the file, in order of occurrence.  
The log file size will be about 178 bytes  
per entry. 3 months of data logs will  
require about 16000 bytes (based on  
Calibration performed every 24 hours).  
The log file contains data in a flat, AS-  
CII, CSV file. The following are the  
Name  
Description  
Example  
Date/Time  
Zero Time  
Mid Time  
Span Time  
Purge Time  
Month-day-year Hours:Minutes:Seconds  
3-7-2001 10:24:57  
Time that Zero span started, Hours:Minutes:Seconds  
Time That Mid span started, Hours:Minutes:Seconds  
Time that span started, Hours:Minutes:Seconds  
10:25:30  
10:27:30  
10:28:30  
10:30:30  
Time that the final purge started,  
Hours:Minutes:Seconds  
Finish Time  
Time that the final purge finishes  
10:31:00  
0.0  
O2 Measured Zero  
O2 Expected Zero  
O2 Zero Drift  
Measured percent O2 for Zero phase of calibration  
Expected percent O2 for Zero phase of calibration  
Percent drift of O2 zero calibration  
0.0  
0.0  
O2 Measured Mid Span  
O2 Expected Mid Span  
O2 Mid Drift  
Measured percent O2 for Mid span phase of calibration 10.1  
Expected percent O2 for Mid span phase of calibration 10.0  
Percent drift of O2 mid calibration.  
-0.4  
20.2  
20.3  
0.4  
1
O2 Measured Span  
O2 Expected Span  
O2 Span Drift  
Measured percent O2 for Span phase of calibration  
Expected percent O2 for Span phase of calibration  
Percent drift of O2 span calibration  
CO Measured Zero  
CO Expected Zero  
CO Zero Drift  
0
0.3  
23  
24  
-0.3  
45  
45  
0
CO Measured Mid Span  
CO Expected Mid Span  
CO Mid Span Drift  
CO Measured Span  
CO Expected Span  
CO Span Drift  
NOx Measured Zero  
NOx Expected Zero  
NOx Zero Drift  
Measured ppm NOx for zero phase of calibration  
Expected ppm NOx for zero phase of calibration  
15  
15  
0
NOx Measured Mid Span Measured ppm NOx for mid span phase of calibration  
30  
30  
0
NOx Expected Mid Span  
NOx Mid Span Drift  
NOx Measured span  
NOx Expected span  
NOx Span Drift  
Measured ppm NOx for mid span phase of calibration  
Measured ppm NOx for span phase of calibration  
Measured ppm NOx for span phase of calibration  
59  
59  
0
Table 3-8. Calibration Log File Format  
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Instruction Manual  
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f.  
Alarm Log File Format  
The days or months maintained in the  
Alarm Log depends on how often trou-  
ble conditions are recorded. If there  
are rarely alarm conditions recorded,  
there is enough space for many years  
of alarm logs to be recorded.  
The log file contains data in a flat, AS-  
CII, CSV file. The following are the  
fields of the file, in order of occurrence.  
Name  
Description  
Example  
Date/Time  
Fault Level  
Fault Type  
Month-day-year Hours:Minutes:Seconds  
1=informational, 2=warning, 3=critical  
0 = O2 Calibration Failed  
1 = CO Calibration Failed **  
2 = NOx Calibration Failed  
3 = O2 High Limit  
3-7-2001 10:24:57  
3
2
4 = O2 Low Limit  
5 = CO High Limit **  
6 = CO Low Limit **  
7 = NOx High Limit  
8 = NOx Low Limit  
9 = O2 Emission Limit  
10 = CO Emission Limit **  
11 = NOx Emission Limit  
12 = 5 Volt Fault **  
13 = 6 Volt Fault **  
14 = 24V Over Max  
15 = 24 Low Min  
16 = Converter Over Temp  
17 = Converter Low Temp  
18 = Converter On Failed **  
19 = Converter Off Failed **  
20 = Zone Over Temp  
21 = Zone Low Temp  
22 = Zone Heater On Failed **  
23 = Zone Heater Off Failed **  
24 = Zone Cooler On Failed **  
25 = Zone Cooler Off Failed **  
26 = Heater Fan On Failed **  
27 = Heater Fan Off Failed **  
28 = Cooler Fan On Failed **  
29 = Cooler Fan Off Failed **  
30 = PDT Over Temp  
31 = PDT Low Temp  
32 = PDT On Failed **  
33 = PDT Off Failed **  
34 = PMT Over Temp  
35 = PMT Low Temp  
36 = PMT On Failed **  
37 = PMT Off Failed **  
38 = O2 Over Temp **  
39 = O2 Low Temp **  
40 = O2 On Failed **  
41 = O2 Off Failed **  
42 = Warmup Time Limit  
70 = IO Board Failed  
ASCII string describing fault. Up to 200 characters.  
Fault Description  
CO Calibration Failed  
** - Alarm is not implemented in this version of software or reserved for future use.  
Table 3-9. Alarm Log File Format  
3-20  
Operation  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
   
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
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Model MicroCEM  
3-7 VIEW DATA LOGS  
croCEM web pages (see Figure 3-18 and  
Figure 3-19). This page can be used to  
view the Emissions log. Other pages may  
be selected to view the calibration log and  
the alarm log.  
View Data Logs will start Internet Explorer  
and display the Emissions page of the Mi-  
If Most Recent is selected, the  
month day and hour do not  
need to be selected.  
Select 1 min., 15 min., 1 hour  
or 24 hour averages.  
Select the ending hour to view  
(applicable only to 1- minute  
averages)  
Note the page header was scrolled out of view to show all the selection  
options, but it can be seen in Figure 3-19.  
Figure 3-18. View Data Logs  
Average Period  
1 Minute  
Time Range Displayed  
1 Hour  
15 Minutes  
1 Hour  
1 Day  
3 Days  
12 Hours  
1 Month  
24 Hours  
3 Months  
Table 3-10. Average Period Selection  
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Operation  
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Instruction Manual  
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January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
NOTE  
The Real-time, Config and Download are included in the navigation menu but these pages are  
intended for remote desktop use. As an enhancement these items could be hidden if the pages  
are browsed from a Windows CE version of Internet Explorer.  
The Emission Data-Logs  
data is shown here.  
Alarms and Calibration data  
may also be viewed.  
A Date is shown for 1 min or 15  
minute averages. A date range  
is shown for 1 hour or greater  
averages.  
Figure 3-19. View Data Logs Table  
3-22  
Operation  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
 
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
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3-8 VIEWING MicroCEM DATA WITH A WEB  
BROWSER  
CSV (comma delineated ASCII) format.  
The log files may also be viewed as a web  
page in a tabular format.  
The log files may be accessed using a web  
browser that has access to the MicroCEM  
over a Wireless LAN, serial port connection  
(PPP) or Dialup Connection (RAS). The  
MicroCEM has Window CE Web Server in-  
stalled and provides a Web-based interface  
to select and download the Data-Log files.  
The downloaded Data-Log files will be in a  
a. Real-Time Page  
The Real-Time page provides a real-  
time display of the emission values and  
emission statuses. The display is re-  
freshed every 10 seconds.  
Figure 3-20. Real-Time Web Page  
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Operation  
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Instruction Manual  
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b. Emissions Page  
and pressing the Display button. If de-  
sired a bookmark or shortcut may be  
made to the page displaying the table.  
In the future, the same table can be  
displayed by selecting this bookmark.  
If Most Recent Data was selected, the  
book-marked page will always display  
Most Recent Data. If a specific date  
was specified, the book-marked page  
will always display the same date.  
The Emissions Page can be used to  
view emission history in a tabular web-  
page format. This page is used as part  
of the MicroCEM User interface as well  
as by a remote user (probably from a  
desktop computer).  
The Emission Data-Logs table is dis-  
played (as shown in Figure 3-19) after  
selecting the Date and Average Period  
If Most Recent is selected, the  
month day and hour do not  
need to be selected.  
Select the ending hour to  
view (applicable only to 1  
minute averages)  
Select 1 min., 15 min., 1 hour  
or 24 hour averages.  
Figure 3-21. Emissions Selection  
Figure 3-22. Emissions Table  
3-24  
Operation  
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Instruction Manual  
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Figure 3-23. Calibration Table  
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c. Download Page  
made, press the Download button to  
start the HTTP download. The Micro-  
CEM will create a temporary file that  
contains the selected data. Due to  
memory limitations there is a limit to the  
number of files that can be downloaded  
simultaneously. If this limit is ex-  
ceeded, a message will be displayed  
that reads “The simultaneous download  
limit has been reached, please try  
again later”.  
The download page of the MicroCEM  
allows the selection and download of  
the three types of Data-Logs. To  
quickly download recent data, a  
“Download Most Recent Emissions  
Data” selection is provided. For more  
control over the date range, a “Down-  
load Emissions by Date Range” selec-  
tion is available. Once the selection is  
Download Emissions  
Log, Calibration Log or  
Alarm Log  
Choose from:  
1 Minute / 8 Hours  
1 Minute / 1 Day  
1 Minute / 1 Week  
15 Minutes / 1 Day  
15 Minutes / 1 Week  
15 Minutes / 1 Month  
15 Minutes / 3 Months  
1 Hour / 1 Week  
1 Hour / 1 Month  
1 Hour / 3 Months  
Figure 3-24. Download Web Page  
3-26  
Operation  
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Instruction Manual  
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3-9 VIEWING MicroCEM DATA WITH MS EX-  
CEL  
available. The workstation needs access to the  
MicroCEM web site via RAS (Dialup), LAN or the  
Internet. Then in Excel, select Data menu, Get  
External Data, New Web Query. The dialog  
shown in Figure 3-25 will appear. Type in the ad-  
dress for a MicroCEM web page that contains a  
table with the desired data. Then press OK and  
click on the cell where the data should appear.  
The data will then appear in the spreadsheet. To  
have the data updated periodically, right-click on  
one of the cells that contains the linked data and  
select Data Range Properties. Check the box the  
reads “Refresh Every” and set the refresh period.  
For additional information refer to MS Excel  
documentation.  
The MicroCEM Data may be view with MS Excel  
using two different methods. The first method is  
to open the data log files that have been down-  
loaded onto a workstation. The files may then be  
opened directly with Excel. The second method is  
to create an Excel workbook, which links to the  
MicroCEM web page. This is described in the  
following paragraph.  
An Excel spreadsheet may be linked to a Micro-  
CEM web site, which periodically refreshes the  
spreadsheet with data from the web site. To do  
this, first make sure the MicroCEM web site is  
Figure 3-25. New Web Query  
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3-10 AUTO CALIBRATION  
plays the current emission values and the  
status of the calibration. The calibration  
may be canceled before it completes by  
pressing the Cancel button.  
The Auto Calibration dialog is displayed  
whenever calibration is in process. It dis-  
Note: The title of this dialog will read either “Auto Calibration” or “Manual Calibration” to indicate how the cali-  
bration process was initiated.  
Figure 3-26. Auto Calibration  
3-28  
Operation  
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Instruction Manual  
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SECTION 4  
SOFTWARE  
4-1 OVERVIEW  
computer. It will not normally run locally since  
there is no input device or display connected  
to the MicroCEM processor.  
The MicroCEM Software includes 3 main  
components. One component is the Micro-  
CEM control software that interfaces with the  
instrumentation and records the emissions  
measurements. A second component is the  
User Interface Software that provides real-  
time status and configuration dialogs. A third  
component is the web server software that  
uses VB Script or Java Script to provide a  
web-based interface to the MicroCEM.  
4-3 MicroCEM WEB SERVER SOFTWARE  
Web Browser: Internet Explorer 4.0 or Net-  
scape 4.0  
The Web Server Software provides the web  
based interface described in this document. It  
is implemented as a VB Script or Java Script.  
The script will obtain much of the needed in-  
formation directly from the Data-Log files or  
configuration file. The real-time information  
will be obtained from a memory segment  
shared with the MicroCEM control software.  
The web server support multiple simultaneous  
clients. The maximum number of allowed  
connections could be limited to a reasonable  
number through the Windows CE Web Server  
configuration dialogs.  
4-2 MicroCEM USER INTERFACE SOFTWARE  
Hardware Platform: Pocket PC  
The MicroCEM User Interface Software com-  
municates with the MicroCEM Control Soft-  
ware using TCP/IP. It may run locally on the  
MicroCEM computer or remotely on a Pocket  
PC with a RS232 connection to the MicroCEM  
uCEM Computer  
uCEM User  
Interface  
HTML (TCP/  
IP)  
Shared  
Memory  
Segment  
Serial  
Cable  
uCEM  
Control  
Software  
Web  
Server  
Script  
HTML  
TCP/IP  
Pocket PC  
Data-Log  
& Config  
Files  
Device Drivers  
Workstation  
As an option a  
Wireless Network  
may be used.  
Ethernet,  
Modem or serial  
Digital and  
Analog IO  
Sensors and  
Control Circuitry  
Figure 4-1. MicroCEM Software Block Diagram  
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Software  
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4-4 SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT  
Microsoft Visual SourceSafe is used for ver-  
sion control of all of the MicroCEM software.  
Compuware’s Track Record is used for  
change request management and defect  
tracking.  
4-2  
Software  
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SECTION 5  
MAINTENANCE AND SERVICE  
5-1 OVERVIEW  
DANGER.  
ELECTRICAL SHOCK HAZARD  
The MicroCEM Analyzer Module requires very  
little maintenance during normal operation.  
Disconnect power to the module(s) prior to  
replacing components.  
Occasionally, the detector's reaction chamber  
and sapphire window may require cleaning,  
refer to Section 5-5.  
WARNING  
White crystal deposits on the windows of the  
reaction chamber and plugging of capillaries  
and vent are usually due to sample contami-  
nates such as ammonia reacting with the high  
ozone levels and NO components. To elimi-  
nate the contaminates, the sampling system  
should be reworked or a preventive mainte-  
nance program developed (if dropout is not  
excessive). Another source of crystalline for-  
mation is contaminated air.  
QUALIFIED PERSONNEL  
This equipment should not be adjusted or  
repaired by anyone except properly quali-  
fied service personnel.  
WARNING  
PARTS INTEGRITY  
Several components may require replace-  
ment. These are discussed in the following  
sections.  
Tampering with or unauthorized substitu-  
tion of components may adversely affect  
safety of this product. Use only factory-  
approved components for repair.  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Maintenance and Service  
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Instruction Manual  
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Converter  
(Figure 5-2)  
NDIR Detector  
Ozone Generator  
Valve Manifold  
Assembly  
Thermoelectric Cooler  
Power Relay  
Paramagnetic  
Detector  
Regulator  
3-Way Valve  
Chemiluminescense  
Detector (Figure 5-4)  
Power Supply Assembly  
Transistor  
Fan  
Personality Modules  
(Figure 5-3)  
Figure 5-1. MicroCEM Component Location  
5-2  
Maintenance and Service  
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Instruction Manual  
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5-2 CONVERTER  
and remove the converter. Reassemble in re-  
verse order, ensuring that the converter is ori-  
ented with the glass cloth at the bottom and  
the sensor is oriented correctly inside the  
heater jacket.  
To replace the converter or sensor, discon-  
nect the two pneumatic tubes and two electri-  
cal connections. Unlace the heater blanket,  
ASSEMBLED SIDE VIEW  
Sensor  
Heater  
Jacket  
655228  
Converter  
Tube 655227  
Wrap with  
aluminum foil  
Sensor  
655282  
Glass  
Cloth  
Figure 5-2. Converter Assembly  
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Maintenance and Service  
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Instruction Manual  
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5-3 OZONE GENERATOR  
ality modules are installed on a custom back-  
To replace the ozonator, remove the two large  
straps and all tie-wraps, and disconnect the  
one electrical connection. Reassemble in re-  
verse order.  
To remove any on the personality modules.  
Remove cables form module to be removed,  
there are two screws at the bottom of each  
module. You will have to loosen each screw  
before you can remove the personality mod-  
ule.  
5-4 PERSONALITY MODULES  
There are five different personality modules.  
Depending on your unit, you may have three,  
four or five modules installed. These person-  
Tag each cable and its location before dis-  
connecting any wiring. This helps in re-  
assembly.  
EXIO  
AUX  
PDD  
NDIR  
PMD  
Figure 5-3. Personality Modules and Backplane.  
5-4  
Maintenance and Service  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
     
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
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5-5 CHEMILUMINESCENSE DETECTOR AS-  
SEMBLY  
NOTE  
Component Positioning. The proce-  
dure described above is for the pur-  
pose of maintaining the relative  
positions of windows and O-ring to the  
Reaction Chamber during installation.  
a. Reaction Chamber  
Removal  
Replace the top cap and screws. Reverse  
the removal procedure to reinstall the  
Detector Assembly into the Analyzer  
Module.  
Disconnect the stainless steel tubing lines  
at the Gyrolok fittings. Remove the (4)  
nuts holding the Detector Assembly to  
the chassis. Disconnect the plug from  
connector J1 on the Signal Board and  
remove the assembly from the chassis.  
b. Photodiode  
Removal  
NOTE  
Remove the Detector Assembly as de-  
scribed above. Invert the housing to ac-  
cess the mounting bracket. Remove the  
(3) screws and shoulder washers from the  
bracket. Remove the bracket, insulating  
disk and bottom plate as a unit to mini-  
mize the spread of the heatsink com-  
pound.  
Heatsink Compound. Care should be  
taken to avoid getting heatsink com-  
pound on optical surfaces. If this sub-  
stance is removed during the  
disassembly process, a zinc ox-  
ide-filled, silicone grease (e.g., Dow  
Corning 340 or EG&G Wakefield Engi-  
neering's Series 120 Thermal Joint  
Compound) be reapplied in the re-  
assembly of this component.  
Remove the (2) screws holding the lower  
section of the Detector Housing, then  
slide the section along the cable and re-  
move.  
Although the heater and thermostat can  
be removed to facilitate handling, contact  
with the white heatsink compound can be  
minimized by leaving these items in place.  
Remove the (2) screws holding the top  
plate of the Detector , and move the plate  
along the wires and away from the De-  
tector .  
Remove the (2) screws holding the  
socket, thermistor and photodiode in  
place, being careful not to lose the wash-  
ers that are used as shims.  
Grasp the socket and photodiode base  
while slowly rotating to separate the pho-  
todiode from the housing. Some friction  
will be felt as an O-ring is used around the  
photodiode as a seal.  
Remove the (2) screws holding the tube  
assembly in place. Hold the tubing with  
one hand while inverting the Detector  
Housing with the other, allowing the Re-  
action Chamber O-ring and window to be  
removed from below.  
Installation  
To replace the photodiode, carefully re-  
move the diode from the green socket,  
and replace with a new one. Before  
mounting the new diode, the top cap of  
the enclosure should be temporarily re-  
moved and the (2) screws holding the  
Reaction Chamber loosened about two  
turns. This allows air which is trapped  
between the O-ring seals to escape when  
the diode is inserted. It also maintains the  
Installation  
To reinstall, hold the housing in the in-  
verted position while sliding the Reaction  
Chamber O-ring and window into position  
and the tubing into the slot in the housing.  
Hold the Reaction Chamber in place while  
rotating the housing upright. Replace the  
hold-down screws.  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Maintenance and Service  
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Instruction Manual  
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January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
position of the O-ring and window in the  
upper compartment.  
Replace the lower section of the housing,  
then the bottom cover, insulator and  
bracket with the shoulder washers and  
screws.  
The new photodiode should be slowly in-  
serted into the housing while gradually  
rotating the body. This allows the O-ring  
to properly seat. Continue replacing  
screws, washers, thermistors, etc., with  
the thicker shim (washer) on the opposite  
side of the socket from the thermistor.  
Re-tighten the screws in the Reaction  
Chamber (upper section). Replace the top  
cap and its screws.  
To reinstall in the Analyzer Module, re-  
verse the procedure for removal as indi-  
cated above.  
Sapphire  
Window  
Reaction  
Chamber  
Photodiode  
Thermistor  
Assembly  
Ozone  
Sample  
Photodiode Socket  
Assembly  
Exhaust  
Detector Mounting  
Bracket  
Figure 5-4. Chemiluminescense Detector Assembly  
5-6  
Maintenance and Service  
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Model MicroCEM  
M3X0.5 x 25mm Screw (2)  
3mm Spring Washer (2)  
Detector Header  
*
Heater  
*
Heater  
Retainer Gasket  
M3X0.5 x 16mm Screw (2)  
3mm Spring Washer (2)  
*
Thermostat  
Reaction Chamber  
O-Ring 854540  
Tubing Cover  
Sapphire Window  
Cushioning Gasket  
O-Ring 876478  
Photodiode  
Cable  
Lower Cover  
Photodiode Assembly  
(see detail below)  
M3X0.5 x 20mm Screw (2)  
3mm Spring Washer (2)  
Insulator  
(between Lower Cover  
and Mounting Bracket)  
Nylon Shoulder  
Washers (3)  
Detector Cover  
M3X0.5 x 16mm  
Screw (3)  
Photodiode Case  
Ground  
M3X0.5 x 16mm Screw (2)  
3mm Spring Washer (2)  
*
Heater/Thermostat Assembly 655235.  
Photodiode  
655258  
Thermistor  
655216  
Thermistor Spacer  
No. 6 Flat Washer (2)  
Thermistor Shim  
Photodiode Socket Assembly  
Assembly of Photodiode  
Figure 5-5. Chemiluminescense Detector Assembly – Exploded View  
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5-8  
Maintenance and Service  
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Instruction Manual  
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SECTION 6  
TROUBLESHOOTING  
6-1 TROUBLESHOOTING LEAKS  
6-2 POCKET PC CONNECTION FAILURE  
Liberally cover all fittings, seals, and other pos-  
sible sources of leakage with a suitable leak test  
liquid such as SNOOP (part 837801). Bubbling  
or foaming indicates leakage. Checking for bub-  
bles will locate most leaks but could miss some,  
as some areas are inaccessible to the applica-  
tion of SNOOP. For positive assurance that  
system is leak free, perform one of the tests  
above.  
In the event the connection between the Pocket  
PC and the MicroCEM fails, a connection failure  
dialog will be displayed. It will display the fol-  
lowing message:  
Connection with uCEM lost, retrying…  
A Cancel button will be displayed. The Micro-  
CEM software will continue to attempt to recon-  
nect with the MicroCEM indefinitely and will stop  
when a connection is made or the cancel button  
is pressed.  
NOTE:  
Refer to Specification in Preface for maxi-  
mum pressure limitations.  
If the Cancel button is pressed, any setting  
changes that were made without pressing OK to  
accept will be lost. If Auto Calibration was in  
process, it will be completed by the MicroCEM  
even though the connection was lost.  
For differential measurement, the leak check  
must be performed for the measurement and  
reference side separately.  
For analyzers with parallel gas paths, the  
leak check must be performed for each gas  
path separately.  
6-3 TROUBLE LED  
The Trouble LED output is activated whenever  
there is a critical alarm that has not been ac-  
knowledged. This provides both an output from  
the MicroCEM box and an LED indication.  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Troubleshooting  
6-1  
       
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
6-2  
Troubleshooting  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
SECTION 7  
REPLACEMENT PARTS  
1020839-100  
1020840-100  
1020841-101  
1020842-100  
1020843-100  
1020869-100  
1020973-100  
1020987-100  
42706504  
42711801  
634398  
PMD Module Assembly  
NDIR Module Assembly  
PDD Module Assembly  
AUX Module Assembly  
EXIO Module Assembly  
Thermoelectric Cooler Assembly  
Thermistor  
Heater Assembly  
Desiccant Bulbs  
Electrical Cable  
Capillary, Vent  
638614  
Pressure Gauge  
655216  
655250  
655289  
657716  
657719  
658157  
Thermistor Assembly  
Converter Assembly  
Restrictor, Bulkhead  
Power Supply, Ozonator  
Ozone Generator  
Restrictor, Brass  
659754  
90003311  
902124  
Photodiode Detector  
Paramagnetic Detector  
Flowmeter  
905778  
4-Port Manifold  
905779  
2-Way Valve  
905780  
3-Way Valve  
905871  
Relay, Power 15A  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Replacement Parts  
7-1  
 
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
7-2  
Replacement Parts  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
SECTION 8  
RETURN OF MATERIAL  
8-1 RETURN OF MATERIAL  
If warranty service is expected, the defective  
unit will be carefully inspected and tested at  
the factory. If the failure was due to the condi-  
tions listed in the standard Rosemount war-  
ranty, the defective unit will be repaired or  
replaced at Rosemount’s option, and an oper-  
ating unit will be returned to the customer in  
accordance with the shipping instructions fur-  
nished in the cover letter.  
If factory repair of defective equipment is re-  
quired, proceed as follows:  
1. Secure a return authorization from a  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. Sales Office or  
Representative before returning the  
equipment. Equipment must be returned  
with complete identification in accordance  
with Rosemount instructions or it will not  
be accepted.  
For equipment no longer under warranty, the  
equipment will be repaired at the factory and  
returned as directed by the purchase order  
and shipping instructions.  
2. In no event will Rosemount be responsible  
for equipment returned without proper  
authorization and identification.  
8-2 CUSTOMER SERVICE  
3. Carefully pack the defective unit in a sturdy  
box with sufficient shock absorbing mate-  
rial to ensure no additional damage occurs  
during shipping.  
For order administration, replacement parts,  
application assistance, on-site or factory re-  
pair, service or maintenance contract informa-  
tion, contact:  
4. In a cover letter, describe completely:  
Rosemount Analytical Inc.  
Process Analytic Division  
Customer Service Center  
1-800-433-6076  
a. The symptoms that determined the  
equipment is faulty.  
b. The environment in which the equip-  
ment was operating (housing, weather,  
vibration, dust, etc.).  
c. Site from where the equipment was  
removed.  
8-3 TRAINING  
d. Whether warranty or non-warranty  
service is expected.  
A comprehensive Factory Training Program of  
operator and service classes is available. For  
a copy of the Current Operator and Service  
Training Schedule, contact the Technical  
Services Department at:  
e. Complete shipping instructions for the  
return of the equipment.  
5. Enclose a cover letter and purchase order  
and ship the defective equipment accord-  
ing to instructions provided in the Rose-  
mount Return Authorization, prepaid, to:  
Rosemount Analytical Inc.  
Phone 1-714-986-7600  
FAX 1-714-577-8006  
Rosemount Analytical Inc.  
Process Analytic Division  
Customer Service Center  
1-800-433-6076  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
Return of Material  
8-1  
         
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
8-2  
Return of Material  
Rosemount Analytical Inc. A Division of Emerson Process Management  
WARRANTY  
Goods and part(s) (excluding consumables) manufactured by Seller are warranted to be free from  
defects in workmanship and material under normal use and service for a period of twelve (12)  
months from the date of shipment by Seller. Consumables, glass electrodes, membranes, liquid  
junctions, electrolyte, o-rings, etc., are warranted to be free from defects in workmanship and  
material under normal use and service for a period of ninety (90) days from date of shipment by  
Seller. Goods, part(s) and consumables proven by Seller to be defective in workmanship and/or  
material shall be replaced or repaired, free of charge, F.O.B. Seller's factory provided that the  
goods, part(s) or consumables are returned to Seller's designated factory, transportation charges  
prepaid, within the twelve (12) month period of warranty in the case of goods and part(s), and in  
the case of consumables, within the ninety (90) day period of warranty. This warranty shall be in  
effect for replacement or repaired goods, part(s) and the remaining portion of the ninety (90) day  
warranty in the case of consumables. A defect in goods, part(s) and consumables of the com-  
mercial unit shall not operate to condemn such commercial unit when such goods, part(s) and  
consumables are capable of being renewed, repaired or replaced.  
The Seller shall not be liable to the Buyer, or to any other person, for the loss or damage directly  
or indirectly, arising from the use of the equipment or goods, from breach of any warranty, or from  
any other cause. All other warranties, expressed or implied are hereby excluded.  
IN CONSIDERATION OF THE HEREIN STATED PURCHASE PRICE OF THE GOODS,  
SELLER GRANTS ONLY THE ABOVE STATED EXPRESS WARRANTY. NO OTHER WAR-  
RANTIES ARE GRANTED INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, EXPRESS AND IMPLIED  
WARRANTIES OR MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  
Limitations of Remedy. SELLER SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR DAMAGES CAUSED BY DE-  
LAY IN PERFORMANCE. THE SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE REMEDY FOR BREACH OF WAR-  
RANTY SHALL BE LIMITED TO REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT UNDER THE STANDARD  
WARRANTY CLAUSE. IN NO CASE, REGARDLESS OF THE FORM OF THE CAUSE OF AC-  
TION, SHALL SELLER'S LIABILITY EXCEED THE PRICE TO BUYER OF THE SPECIFIC  
GOODS MANUFACTURED BY SELLER GIVING RISE TO THE CAUSE OF ACTION. BUYER  
AGREES THAT IN NO EVENT SHALL SELLER'S LIABILITY EXTEND TO INCLUDE INCIDEN-  
TAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES. CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES SHALL INCLUDE, BUT  
ARE NOT LIMITED TO, LOSS OF ANTICIPATED PROFITS, LOSS OF USE, LOSS OF REVE-  
NUE, COST OF CAPITAL AND DAMAGE OR LOSS OF OTHER PROPERTY OR EQUIPMENT.  
IN NO EVENT SHALL SELLER BE OBLIGATED TO INDEMNIFY BUYER IN ANY MANNER  
NOR SHALL SELLER BE LIABLE FOR PROPERTY DAMAGE AND/OR THIRD PARTY CLAIMS  
COVERED BY UMBRELLA INSURANCE AND/OR INDEMNITY COVERAGE PROVIDED TO  
BUYER, ITS ASSIGNS, AND EACH SUCCESSOR INTEREST TO THE GOODS PROVIDED  
HEREUNDER.  
Force Majeure. Seller shall not be liable for failure to perform due to labor strikes or acts beyond  
Seller's direct control.  
Instruction Manual  
748467-A  
January 2002  
Model MicroCEM  
Emerson Process Management  
Rosemount Analytical Inc.  
Process Analytic Division  
1201 N. Main St.  
Orrville, OH 44667-0901  
T (330) 682-9010  
EUROPEAN TECHNOLOGY CENTER  
Fisher-Rosemount GmbH & Co.  
Industriestrasse 1  
63594 Hasselroth  
Germany  
F (330) 684-4434  
E-mail: gas.csc@emersonprocess.com  
Phone: 49-6055-884 0  
Fax: 49-6055-884209  
ASIA - PACIFIC  
EUROPE, MIDDLE EAST, AND AFRICA  
LATIN AMERICA  
Fisher-Rosemount  
Singapore Private Ltd.  
1 Pandan Crescent  
Singapore 128461  
Republic of Singapore  
Phone: 65-777-8211  
Fax: 65-777-0947  
Fisher-Rosemount Ltd.  
Heath Place  
Bognor Regis  
West Sussex PO22 9SH  
England  
Phone: 44-1243-863121  
Fax: 44-1243-845354  
Fisher - Rosemount  
Av. das Americas  
3333 sala 1004  
Rio de Janeiro, RJ  
Brazil 22631-003  
Phone: 55-21-431-1882  
© Rosemount Analytical Inc. 2001  

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