Oxygen signal: Difference between revisions

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{{MitoPedia
{{MitoPedia
|description=The '''oxygen signal''' of the [[O2k]] is transmitted from the electrochemical polarographic oxygen sensor ([[OroboPOS]]) for each of the two chambers to [[DatLab]]. The primary signal is a current [mAmp] which is converted into a voltage [V], and calibrated in SI units for amount of substrance concentration [ยตmol.dm-3 or ยตM].
|description=The '''oxygen signal''' of the [[OROBOROS O2k]] is transmitted from the electrochemical polarographic oxygen sensor ([[OroboPOS]]) for each of the two chambers to [[DatLab]]. The primary signal is a current [mAmp] which is converted into a voltage [V], and calibrated in SI units for amount of substrance concentration [ยตmol.dm-3 or ยตM].
|info=[[MiPNet19.18D O2k-calibration]], [[MiPNet06.03 POS-calibration-SOP]]
|info=[[MiPNet19.18D O2k-calibration]], [[MiPNet06.03 POS-calibration-SOP]]
}}
}}

Revision as of 10:04, 6 July 2017


high-resolution terminology - matching measurements at high-resolution


Oxygen signal

Description

[[Description::The oxygen signal of the OROBOROS O2k is transmitted from the electrochemical polarographic oxygen sensor (OroboPOS) for each of the two chambers to DatLab. The primary signal is a current [mAmp] which is converted into a voltage [V], and calibrated in SI units for amount of substrance concentration [ยตmol.dm-3 or ยตM].]]


Reference: [[Info::MiPNet19.18D O2k-calibration, MiPNet06.03 POS-calibration-SOP]]

|mitopedia method=Respirometry }}

MitoPedia O2k and high-resolution respirometry: O2k hardware, DatLab 


Template NextGen-O2k.jpg


MitoPedia O2k and high-resolution respirometry: O2k-Open Support 



Stability of the oxygen signal

The stability of the oxygen signal of the O2k is evaluated by the (negative) uncorrected slope over time. After smoothing, the slope of a stable sensor should be less than +- 1 pmol.s-1.ml-1 in a 2-ml chamber.

  • Instability of the oxygen signal
  • There is drift of the oxygen signal over short or long periods of time.
  • The signal at air saturation is abnormally high for a given gain setting.
  • The zero current is high (>2.5%) and may show drift.

Oxygen signal does not respond

  • The oxygen signal remains at or close to zero even at high oxygen levels.
  • The signal at air saturation is abnormally low.
  1. Check the gain setting for the affected oxygen channel. Set to Gain 1.
  2. Apply technical service: O2k-technical support and open innovation
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