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The amount of ambient gas in the air is measured by a flammable gas sensor, which determines whether the concentration is high enough for the mixture to ignite.
The best course of action is to switch to fresh air, turn off machinery, and remove people from the area when a high concentration is achieved.
One of the most crucial tools for detecting poisonous gases, the gas sensor offers a crucial way to track the concentration and environmental data of gas in order to ensure the safety of production.
Workplaces may frequently employ combustible gases like LPG, acetylene, hydrogen, propane, propylene, and methane. These easily ignitable, potentially explosive gases are also known as fuel gases.
The Global Flammable gas sensor market accounted for $XX Billion in 2023 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2024 to 2030.
Nevada Nano has introduced a new automated flammable gas sensor that increases safety and lowers ownership costs.
The new MPS Flammable Gas Sensor, the first sensor of its kind capable of properly detecting, quantifying, and classifying a wide range of flammable or explosive gases using a single calibration, was released today by Nevada Nano.
The MPS Flammable Gas Sensor is also capable of measuring the concentration of flammable and combustible gas mixtures and can categories detected gases and mixtures into hydrogen, methane, or light/medium/heavy gas, which is another industry first.
In order to address the issues that have dogged flammable sensors for decades, their technical team created a durable and dependable sensor.
With only one calibration, the new MPS Flammable Gas Sensor gives accurate measurement of 12 gases and offers stable, dependable findings for years.
Both permanent and portable applications can use the sensor. The MPS Flammable Gas Sensor delivers reliable detection of hydrogen and other hydrocarbons not detected by NDIR flammable gas sensors while using substantially less power than catalytic bead-based sensors.
Compared to sensors made with catalytic beads, Nevada Nano’s sensor has a reduced total cost of ownership.
There is no longer a need for frequent, expensive manual calibrations because the MPS Flammable Gas sensor will not “poison” or cease to function when exposed to typical industrial chemicals.
Even more crucially, employees can rely on the MPS Flammable Gas sensor’s dependability to consistently maintain a safe workplace.