40 CFR §1065.845
Verified against eCFR.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on eCFR.gov ↗
Since FID analyzers generally have an incomplete response to alcohols and carbonyls, determine each FID analyzer's alcohol/carbonyl response factor (RFOHCi[THC-FID]) after FID optimization to subtract those responses from the FID reading. Use the most recently determined alcohol/carbonyl response factors to compensate for alcohol/carbonyl response. You are not required to determine the response factor for a compound unless you will subtract its response to compensate for a response.
- (a)You may generate response factors as described in paragraph (b) of this section, or you may use the following default response factors, consistent with good engineering judgment:
- (b)Determine the alcohol/carbonyl response factors as follows:
- (1)Select a C3H8 span gas that meets the specifications of § 1065.750. Note that FID zero and span balance gases may be any combination of purified air or purified nitrogen that meets the specifications of § 1065.750. We recommend FID analyzer zero and span gases that contain approximately the flow-weighted mean concentration of O2 expected during testing. Record the C3H8 concentration of the gas.
- (2)Select or prepare an alcohol/carbonyl calibration gas that meets the specifications of § 1065.750 and has a concentration typical of the peak concentration expected at the hydrocarbon standard. Record the calibration concentration of the gas.
- (3)Start and operate the FID analyzer according to the manufacturer's instructions.
- (4)Confirm that the FID analyzer has been calibrated using C3H8. Calibrate on a carbon number basis of one (C1). For example, if you use a C3H8 span gas of concentration 200 µmol/mol, span the FID to respond with a value of 600 µmol/mol.
- (5)Zero the FID. Note that FID zero and span balance gases may be any combination of purified air or purified nitrogen that meets the specifications of § 1065.750. We recommend FID analyzer zero and span gases that contain approximately the flow-weighted mean concentration of O2 expected during testing.
- (6)Span the FID with the C3H8 span gas that you selected under paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
- (7)Introduce at the inlet of the FID analyzer the alcohol/carbonyl calibration gas that you selected under paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
- (8)Allow time for the analyzer response to stabilize. Stabilization time may include time to purge the analyzer and to account for its response.
- (9)While the analyzer measures the alcohol/carbonyl concentration, record 30 seconds of sampled data. Calculate the arithmetic mean of these values.
- (10)Divide the mean measured concentration by the recorded span concentration of the alcohol/carbonyl calibration gas on a C1-equivalent basis. The result is the FID analyzer's response factor for alcohol/carbonyl, RFOHCi[THC-FID] on a C1-equivalent basis.
- (c)Alcohol/carbonyl calibration gases must remain within ±2% of the labeled concentration. You must demonstrate the stability based on a quarterly measurement procedure with a precision of ±2% percent or another method that we approve. Your measurement procedure may incorporate multiple measurements. If the true concentration of the gas changes deviates by more than ±2%, but less than ±10%, the gas may be relabeled with the new concentration.