The design and development of a direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide concentrations

"Gaseous nitric oxide, in concentrations between 0 and 20 ppm, is currently being used to treat patients with post-surgical complications and respiratory disorders. Currently available instruments are expensive and have problems that limit their usefulness for this application. This thesis di...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Parikh, Bhairavi Rajiv
Other Authors: Stevan Kun, Committee Member
Format: Others
Published: Digital WPI 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/374
https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1373&context=etd-dissertations
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spelling ndltd-wpi.edu-oai-digitalcommons.wpi.edu-etd-dissertations-13732019-03-22T05:42:39Z The design and development of a direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide concentrations Parikh, Bhairavi Rajiv "Gaseous nitric oxide, in concentrations between 0 and 20 ppm, is currently being used to treat patients with post-surgical complications and respiratory disorders. Currently available instruments are expensive and have problems that limit their usefulness for this application. This thesis discusses the development of an inexpensive, direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide. The prototype sensor incorporates a 0.125 cm, gas permeable, flow-thru liquid cell into a probe that can be incorporated into a ventilator circuit. Sensor operation is based on the complexation reaction of NO with cytochrome-c (Fe III), a biologically derived heme. The complex is monitored spectrophotometrically in the visible region of the spectrum at 563 nm by an optical spectrograph card. LabVIEW is used for all hardware control, signal acquisition, data processing, display and storage. The sensor has a sensitivity of 2x10-4 Abs/ppm, where Abs denotes absorbance units, a minimum detectable limit of 1.5 ppm, resolution of 0.5 ppm, is stable over the course of 8 hours, has less than 1 ppm error and a response time of less than 2 minutes. All aspects of sensor design and development will be discussed." 2000-08-30T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/374 https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1373&context=etd-dissertations Doctoral Dissertations (All Dissertations, All Years) Digital WPI Stevan Kun, Committee Member Christopher H. Sotak, Department Head Babs R. Soller, Advisor Robert A. Peura, Advisor inhaled nitric oxide optical sensor Nitric oxide Respiratory therapy Intranasal medication Measurement
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic inhaled
nitric oxide
optical
sensor
Nitric oxide
Respiratory therapy
Intranasal medication
Measurement
spellingShingle inhaled
nitric oxide
optical
sensor
Nitric oxide
Respiratory therapy
Intranasal medication
Measurement
Parikh, Bhairavi Rajiv
The design and development of a direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide concentrations
description "Gaseous nitric oxide, in concentrations between 0 and 20 ppm, is currently being used to treat patients with post-surgical complications and respiratory disorders. Currently available instruments are expensive and have problems that limit their usefulness for this application. This thesis discusses the development of an inexpensive, direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide. The prototype sensor incorporates a 0.125 cm, gas permeable, flow-thru liquid cell into a probe that can be incorporated into a ventilator circuit. Sensor operation is based on the complexation reaction of NO with cytochrome-c (Fe III), a biologically derived heme. The complex is monitored spectrophotometrically in the visible region of the spectrum at 563 nm by an optical spectrograph card. LabVIEW is used for all hardware control, signal acquisition, data processing, display and storage. The sensor has a sensitivity of 2x10-4 Abs/ppm, where Abs denotes absorbance units, a minimum detectable limit of 1.5 ppm, resolution of 0.5 ppm, is stable over the course of 8 hours, has less than 1 ppm error and a response time of less than 2 minutes. All aspects of sensor design and development will be discussed."
author2 Stevan Kun, Committee Member
author_facet Stevan Kun, Committee Member
Parikh, Bhairavi Rajiv
author Parikh, Bhairavi Rajiv
author_sort Parikh, Bhairavi Rajiv
title The design and development of a direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide concentrations
title_short The design and development of a direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide concentrations
title_full The design and development of a direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide concentrations
title_fullStr The design and development of a direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide concentrations
title_full_unstemmed The design and development of a direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide concentrations
title_sort design and development of a direct and continuous sensor for the measurement of inhaled nitric oxide concentrations
publisher Digital WPI
publishDate 2000
url https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/374
https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1373&context=etd-dissertations
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