Dwyer PMT User Manual
Page 14
 
Particulate Monitoring Systems
Installation & Operating Manual
Document No. 210-1015-F
Page
8
©2007
It is essential for the pipe/duct to provide an electrical (Faraday) shield for the sensor. It is therefore 
required that the pipe, duct or stack is metal and earth grounded (small inline tubing sensors provide 
their own section of metal pipe which also must be grounded). Consult the factory when insertion 
probe style sensors are to be installed in non-conductive pipes, ducts such as plastic or fiberglass. 
The particulate sensor must be installed in a position where the flow is reasonably laminar and the 
particulate is evenly distributed. The ideal position is where the pipe/duct is straight and free of items 
such as valves, dampers or other flow obstructions for a length of 4 diameters or longer. Horizontal or 
vertical sections are acceptable. For basic flow/no flow detection it is not necessary to select a 
location with a long straight section if access has to be sacrificed dramatically. For trending and 
measurement the need for a straight section and laminar flow increases. The particulate sensor should 
be positioned with approximately two thirds of the straight section upstream of the sensor and one 
third downstream. The particulate sensor should be located in the center of the pipe/duct. If the 
pipe/ducting is square it should be located in the center of one of the sides. In either case, be sure the 
position is such that the tip of the sensor reaches the midpoint or beyond. Always use good 
engineering sense and be sure the sensor will interact with a reasonable representation of the flow. 
For emissions detection applications such as baghouses or cartridge collectors, good locations are 
generally found upstream of the blower. The particulate sensor can be located downstream of the 
blower but not too close to the stack outlet. There must be sufficient duct downstream of the sensor to 
provide adequate electrical and atmospheric shielding. The sensor should be located upstream of any 
sampling ports by at least two feet. It is not necessary that the sensor be in the same section of the 
duct/stack as the sampling ports. Particulate sampling ports require fully-developed laminar flow and 
longer straight sections. 
Extreme vibration should be avoided.
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ATMOSPHERIC AND ELECTRICAL SHIELDING OF SENSOR
• It is essential for the pipe/duct to provide an electrical (Faraday) shield for
the sensor. The pipe/duct or stack should be metal with a high quality earth 
ground. Consult the factory for non-conductive pipes/ducts such as plastic 
or fiberglass. (Small in-line sensors for small tubing provide their own 
section of metal pipe, which also must be grounded). 
• When the sensor is placed in a stack/duct choose a location away from
atmosphere so wind driven atmospheric particulate or rain does not flow 
over the sensor and so external electrical noise cannot affect operation. 
• Do not place the sensor where the pipe/duct is corroded or cracked which
may allow water droplets to create signals as they flow by.
4.2 Mounting
The following types of process mounts are available for the standard probe style sensors:
NPT, Quick-Clamp and ANSI flange.
Inline sensors for small tubing are supplied with swage lock or other tube connections to mount inline
with metal or plastic tubing.
Installation drawings of each mounting type can be found in the appendix.
IMPORTANT