Publication detail

Progress of the IR measurement in the area of the fine particulate material water content

SVĚRÁK, T. BAKER, C. G. J. SIKOROVÁ, K. KEJÍK, P. BULEJKO, P. KRIŠTOF, O.

Original Title

Progress of the IR measurement in the area of the fine particulate material water content

English Title

Progress of the IR measurement in the area of the fine particulate material water content

Type

journal article - other

Language

en

Original Abstract

The moisture content of powdered materials is usually measured by evaluating the mass-decrease of samples in drying chambers or using special, nowadays mostly semiautomatic laboratory balances under standardized conditions, usually at temperatures between 110-140 °C. This method, however, involves some noticeable drawbacks due to the necessity of sampling the material periodically. They are especially the following ones:

English abstract

The moisture content of powdered materials is usually measured by evaluating the mass-decrease of samples in drying chambers or using special, nowadays mostly semiautomatic laboratory balances under standardized conditions, usually at temperatures between 110-140 °C. This method, however, involves some noticeable drawbacks due to the necessity of sampling the material periodically. They are especially the following ones:

Keywords

IR measurement, particulate material,moistness

RIV year

2015

Released

30.04.2015

ISBN

2374-1724

Periodical

International Journal of Environmental Engineering

Year of study

2

Number

1

State

MX

Pages from

146

Pages to

149

Pages count

4

Documents

BibTex


@article{BUT114461,
  author="Tomáš {Svěrák} and Kateřina {Mayerová} and Pavel {Kejík} and Pavel {Bulejko} and Ondřej {Krištof}",
  title="Progress of the IR measurement in the area of the fine
particulate material water content",
  annote="The moisture content of powdered materials is usually
measured by evaluating the mass-decrease of samples in
drying chambers or using special, nowadays mostly
semiautomatic laboratory balances under standardized
conditions, usually at temperatures between 110-140 °C. This
method, however, involves some noticeable drawbacks due to
the necessity of sampling the material periodically. They are
especially the following ones:",
  chapter="114461",
  doi="10.15224/978-1-63248-033-0-05",
  howpublished="online",
  number="1",
  volume="2",
  year="2015",
  month="april",
  pages="146--149",
  type="journal article - other"
}