Issue 5, 2002

Using flow injection analysis to time-resolve rhythmic and pulsatile signals

Abstract

Continuous monitoring can be used to detect rhythms, an important aspect of biology. But peaks of concentration are broadened by dispersion so that they overlap their neighbours and obscure high frequency chemoperiodicities. In this study, flow injection was found experimentally to be useful in resolving these. A rhythmically varying pattern of permanganate concentration was measured spectrophotometrically. The rhythm (frequency 0.08 Hz) was observable at a dispersion coefficient of 3.0 but not at 3.9 (when only a single peak was recorded). It was again observable using the same high dispersion manifold but positioned after an injection valve that subsampled the stream at intervals. A design based on this work is proposed for an automated instrument that outputs a time series of concentration measures.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
11 Feb 2002
Accepted
14 Mar 2002
First published
28 Mar 2002

Analyst, 2002,127, 588-590

Using flow injection analysis to time-resolve rhythmic and pulsatile signals

R. A. Wheatley, Analyst, 2002, 127, 588 DOI: 10.1039/B201504H

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