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Dissolved Oxygen (DO) is the term used for the
measurement of the amount of oxygen dissolved in a unit volume of
water. In water quality applications, such as aquaculture (including
fish farming) and waste water treatment, the level of DO must be
kept high. For aquaculture if the DO level falls too low the fish
will suffocate. In sewage treatment, bacteria decompose the solids.
If the DO level is too low, the bacteria will die and decomposition
ceases; if the DO level is too high, energy is wasted in the
aeration of the water. With industrial applications including
boilers, the make-up water must have low DO levels to prevent
corrosion and boiler scale build-up which inhibits heat
transfer.
Although dissolved oxygen (DO) is usually displayed as mg/L or
ppm, DO sensors do not measure the actual amount of oxygen in
water, but instead measure partial pressure of oxygen in water.
Oxygen pressure is dependant on both salinity and temperature.
There are two fundamental
techniques for measuring DO— galvanic and polarographic. Both probes
use an electrode system where the DO reacts with the cathode to
produce a current. If the electrode materials are selected so that
the difference in potential is -.5 volts or greater between the
cathode and anode, an external potential is not required and the
system is called galvanic. If an external voltage is applied, the
system is called polarographic.
- Galvanic probes are more stable and more accurate at low
dissolved oxygen levels than polarographic probes.
- Galvanic probes often operate several months without
electrolyte or membrane replacement, resulting in lower
maintenance cost.
- Polarographic probes need to be recharged every several weeks
of heavy use.
Galvanic DO sensors consist of
two electrodes, an anode and cathode which are both immersed in
electrolyte (inside the sensor body). An oxygen permeable membrane
separates the anode and cathode from the water being measured.
Oxygen diffuses across the membrane. It interacts with the
probe internals to produce an electrical current (more detail is
shown below the DO sensor graphic). Higher
pressure allows more oxygen to diffuse across the membrane and more
current to be produced. The actual output from the sensor is
in millivolts. This is acheived by passing the current across
a thermistor (a resistor that changes output with
temperature).
V = i * R,
V is
output in Volts, i = current
R is resistance from
thermistor in ohms
The thermistor corrects for membrane
permeability errors due to temperature change. In other words,
increasing permeability at higher temperature allows more oxygen to
diffuse into the sensor, even though the oxygen pressure has not
changed. This would give falsely high DO if the thermistor
were not used.
To represent sensor
output in ppm or mg/L, the temperature of the water must be known.
A separate temperature sensor can be used or one can built
into the sensor. This is independent from the thermistor connected
between the anode and cathode to compensate for membrane
permeability changes due to temperature change.

Some characteristics of membrane DO probes are:
- The pH of the solution does not affect the performance of
membrane probes.
- Chlorine and hydrogen sulfide(H2S) cause erroneous readings in
DO probes.
- Atmospheric pressure (altitude above sea level) affects the
saturation of oxygen. DO probes must be calibrated for the
barometric pressure when reading in mg/l (ppm).
- Membrane thickness determines the output level of the probe
and the speed of response to change in DO levels.
- Salinity correction must be made
The cathode is a hydrogen
electrode and carries a negative potential with respect to the
anode. Electrolyte surrounds the electrode pair and is contained by
the membrane. With no oxygen, the cathode becomes polarized with
hydrogen and resists the flow of current. When oxygen passes through
the membrane, the cathode is depolarized and electrons are consumed.
The cathode electrochemically reduces the oxygen to hydroxyl
ions:
O2 + 2 H2O + 4 e- = 4
OH-
The anode reacts with the product of the
depolarization with a corresponding release of electrons.
Zn + 4 OH- = Zn(OH)42- +
2e-
The electrode pair permits current to flow in direct
proportion to the amount of oxygen entering the system. The
magnitude of the current gives us a direct measure of the amount of
oxygen entering the probe.
Because all of the oxygen entering the probe is
chemically consumed, the partial pressure of oxygen in the
electrolyte is zero. Therefore, a partial pressure gradient exists
across the membrane and the rate of oxygen entering the probe is a
function of the partial pressure of oxygen in the air or water being
measured.
Since the partial pressure of dissolved oxygen is a
function of temperature of the sample, the probe must be calibrated
at the sample temperature or the probe’s meter must automatically
compensate for varying sample temperature. Note that this thermal
effect is different from the thermal response of the membrane
discussed above.
The reading of a DO probe must be corrected for the
amount of salt in the sample. As seen in the chart below, the salt
in solution will reduce the actual concentration of oxygen.
In all DO
Probes, the membrane/sample interface should have a few cm/sec flow
of the sample for precision performance. Without flow at the
interface, the surrounding oxygen will be consumed and the local
reading drops. The output of the probe increases(up to a
point) with relative movement between the probe and sample.
Dissolved Oxygen Measurement
The amount of oxygen that a
given volume of water can hold is a function of the atmospheric
pressure at the water-air interface; the temperature of the water;
and the amount of other dissolved substances (such as salts or other
gases) in the water. Recall seeing bubbles in a pot of water just
before it starts to boil. These bubbles are the air which was
dissolved in the water at room temperature. When the water boils,
the dissolved oxygen is ejected—warmer water contains less DO. When
other substances, such as salts, are dissolved in a unit volume of
water, there is less room for oxygen to dissolve—oxygen is less
soluble than most salts
The following table shows the relationship of
dissolved oxygen (mg/L) to temperature and salinity:
Oxygen Saturation Based on
Temperature and Salinity
| 0 |
14.62ppm |
13.73 |
12.89 |
12.10 |
11.36 |
10.66 |
| 10 |
11.29 |
10.66 |
10.06 |
9.49 |
8.96 |
8.45 |
| 20 |
9.09 |
8.62 |
8.17 |
7.75 |
7.35 |
6.96 |
| 25 |
8.26 |
7.85 |
7.46 |
7.08 |
6.72 |
6.39 |
| 30 |
7.56 |
7.19 |
6.85 |
6.51 |
6.20 |
5.90 |
| 40 |
6.41 |
6.12 |
5.84 |
5.58 |
5.32 |
5.08 |
The
relationship between temperature, salinity, and dissolved oxygen is
approximated with the following exponential equation:
ln( C ) = -139.34 + (1.5757 x 105/T)
- (6.6432 x 107/T2) + (1.2438 x 1010/T3)
- (8.6219 x 1011/T4) - S [1.7674 x
10-2 - (10.754/T) + (2.1407 x 103/T2)]
T = Temperature in degree Kelvin
S = Salinity in parts per thousand (ppt)
C = Concentration in mg/L
As the pressure of the air above the water is
increased, more oxygen will be dissolved in the water. This
increases the concentration of the dissolved oxygen. The solubility
of a gas in a liquid is directly proportional to the pressure of
that gas above the liquid—Henry’s law. This is often expressed
as:
p = k C (C = concentration of
DO)
If different gases are mixed in a confined space of
constant volume and at a definite temperature, each gas exerts the
same pressure as if it alone occupied the space. The pressure of the
mixture as a whole is the total of the individual or partial
pressure of the gases composing the mixture—Dalton’s law of partial
pressures. The partial pressure of each gas is proportional to the
number of molecules of that gas in the mixture. Air is 20.948%
oxygen. When air bubbled through water, only 20% as much oxygen
dissolves as would dissolve if pure oxygen were used instead of air,
at the same pressure.
Concentration of dissolved oxygen is also measured in
units of % saturation. % saturation is simply the ratio of the
measured mg/L of dissolved oxygen divided by the mg/L of dissolved
oxygen at saturation—as given in the above tables, saturation levels
is dependent upon the temperature, salinity, and pressure. Since %
saturation is a ratio, it is not affected by these conditions if the
calibration at 100% saturation was performed under the same
conditions.
Solubility of solutes as a function of temperature
(mg of solutes per liter of
water):
| 02 |
69 |
43 |
31 |
14 |
0 |
|
| CO2 |
3350 |
1690 |
970 |
580 |
|
|
| NaCl |
357,000 |
360,000 |
366,000 |
373,000 |
384,000 |
398,000 |
| KCl |
276,000 |
340,000 |
400,000 |
455,000 |
511,000 |
567,00 |
With
stationary, continuously monitoring Dissolved Oxygen Probes, the
source of the oxygen being measured is air. Thus, Dissolved Oxygen
in air or saturated water (mg/l or ppm) as a function of temperature
is determined by:
Solubility (ml/L) x Density (mg/ml)
x % in air = saturated DO in mg/L (ppm)
Solubility (mg/L) x % in air =
saturated DO in mg/L (ppm)
Increasing temperature usually increases the
solubility of solids and liquids whereas it reduces the solubility
of gases. Also keep your units straight--mg/L, ppm, ml/L, %
saturation. |