DA Aquamaster:
Originally Posted by DA Aquamaster
This can be a problem if you don't have a known tank of 21% to calibrate with. However, at a given altitude with a given analyser the difference caused by the pressure difference inside the sensor is fairly constant. So if you calibrate with a known 21% sample at a given altitude and adjust the reading on the analyser to 20.9% and then, without changing the calibration, expose the sensor to open air for a few minutes, you will get a slightly lower reading. With my analyzer at 4000 ft I will normally get a reading of approx 20.5. So in a pinch, as long as the barometric pressure is the same, I can calibrate in open air and adjust the analyzer to 20.5 rather than 20.9 and expect to get a fairly accurate result. The particular difference in readings will vary depending on on barometirc pressure and the characteristics of your particular analyzer.
padiscubapro:
This is surprising.. at 4000ft your value if its at ambient should be somewhere around 17.9.. I'm guessing that the cell is not truely equalized to ambient... this can happen if the back side of the cell is sealed and there is a pressure imbalance between the front and rear of the cell..
I cant think of another way without having some stagnant other than having some stangant pressurized gas in the chamber..
But the error on the higher mix is close to expected..
Whew!
Lots of inferences leading to not-quite-accurate conclusions here...
(1) Oxygen analysers measure partial pressure rather than percentage of oxygen. Well, yeah, sorta, but... Since the analyser is measuring the oxidation of the sensor, the rate of oxidation is determined by the number of oxygen molecules that react with the sensor, which is pretty much dependent on the density of the oxygen and the flow rate, and yes, the density is a function of ambient pressure (altitude) and FO2. But what you're missing is that the
sensor itself is always at ambient pressure; once past the flow restrictor, the molecules in the gas being analysed spread out to occupy the same space as the molecules in the air, whatever the altitude, and so a sensor that is accurately calibrated to the
percentage of oxygen in the ambient air or the air in a scuba cylinder will accurately measure the percentage of oxygen in the mix being analysed. In other words, making some kind of altitude correction will give you bad readings, since all the gases are being analysed at the same pressure. The oxygen sensor is
not in a pressurized chamber.
(2) In DA Aquamaster's post he notes a decrease in percentage when going from scuba air to atmospheric air of some 0.4%. This is not unusual at all, because the percentage of oxygen in
dry air - the air in a scuba tank - and normally humidified room air, is about that, but can be as high as a whole percent (in Alabama in the summertime - "it ain't the heat, it's the humidity"). Using ambient air is fine so long as you (a) know the temperature and relative humidity, (b) have a chart to show you what your calibration value should be (varies from about 19.9% to 20.9%) and use that value, and (c) have a flow rate over the sensor for calibration that's the same as the flow rate you're going to use for analysis. I have found that gently waving the sensor back and forth does the trick (verified many times using a calibration gas and the same flow restrictor as for the gas being analysed).
Y'all be safe now, y'hear...
Rick