Low Impedance pH Sensitive Electrochemical Devices That are Potentially Applicable to Transcutaneous PGo2Measurements
- 1 July 1978
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica
- Vol. 22 (s68) , 137-141
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-6576.1978.tb01409.x
Abstract
Two cases of low impedance, non-glass membrane electrodes for pH measurement were evaluated: (I) Metal--metal oxide electrodes and (II) Reduction-oxidation electrodes. The fundamental cause of oxygen sensitivity of metal-metal oxide electrodes were examined and three approaches for its suppression were proposed. For the case of Sb--Sb2Ox electordes, oxygen sensitivity can be attenuated partially by cell loading, either directly across the reference electrode or indirectly across a third slave electrode. In a PO2 range of 8--54 kPa, more than 95% of the PO2 response can be suppressed by loading the cell emf to half of tis open-circuit value. The oxygen sensitivity also was observed to diminished by grinding the metal-metal oxide and pressing it under high pressure into a pellet electrode. Other metal-metal oxide electrodes that have promise in transcutaneous measurement are the Pd-PdO2 electrodes. The redox electrodes are typified by the Quinhydrone electrode. A membrane Quinhydrome electrode showed a sensitivity of 56 mV/Decade at 37 degree C and no oxygen sensitivity up to 50 kPa and a drift of 1 mV/h over a 24-h period. However, the stability deteriorated over a long-term period.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The CO2-quinhydrone electrode. A new method to measure partial CO2 pressure in gases and liquidsRespiration Physiology, 1972
- Modern ElectrochemistryPublished by Springer Nature ,1970