Turbidity Sensor Calibration Procedure
https://instrumentationtools.blogspot.com/2015/05/turbidity-sensor-calibration-procedure.html
The turbidity  method  is based upon  a comparison  of intensity of light scattered  by a sample  under defined  conditions  with the intensity  of light scattered  by a standard  reference  suspension.   A turbidimeter  is a nephelometer  with a visible  light source for illuminating  the sample and one or more photo-electric   detectors  placed ninety degrees to the path of the light source.  Note: the below  calibration  procedure  is for a turbidimeter  which the sample  is placed  into a cuvette. 
Some instruments  will only accept one standard.   For those instruments,  the second, third, etc., standards  will serve as check points. 
Calibration  Procedure:
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| Turbidity sensor calibration procedure | 
1. Allow  the calibration  standards  to equilibrate  at the ambient  temperature.   The use of commercially   available  polymer  primary  standards  (AMCO-AEPA-l)    is preferred; however,  the standards  can be prepared  using Formazin  (read the warning  on the label before  use) according  to the EPA analytical  Method  180.1.  Other standards  may be used if they can be shown that they are equivalent  to the previously  mentioned standards. 
2. If the standard  cuvette  is not sealed, rinse a cuvette  with deionized  water.   Shake the cuvette  to remove  as much water as possible.   Do not wipe  dry the inside of the cuvette because  lint from the wipe may remain  in the cuvette.   Add the standard  to the cuvette. 
3. Before  performing  the calibration  procedure,  make  sure the cuvettes  are not scratched and the outside  surfaces  are dry and free from fingerprints  and dust.  If the cuvette  is scratched  or dirty, discard  or clean the cuvette respectively.    Note:   some               . manufacturers   require  the cuvette  to be orientated  in the instrument  in a particular direction  for accurate  reading. 
4. Select  a low value  standard  such as a zero or 0.02 NTU  and calibrate according   to manufacturer's                         instructions.   Note:  a zero standard  (approximately   0 NTU) can be prepared  by passing  distilled  water through  a 0.45 micron  pore size membrane  filter. 
5. Select  a high standard  and calibrate  according  to manufacturer's   instructions  or verify the calibration  if instrument  will not accept a second  standard.   In verifying,  the instrument  should  read the standard  value to within  the specifications   of the instrument.  If the instrument  has range of scales, check  each range that will be used during  the sampling  event with a standard  that falls within  that range. 
6. Record  the calibration  information  on calibration log sheet.
