DocumentCode
1183904
Title
An Inductive Conductivity Meter for Monitoring the Salinity of Dialysis Water
Author
Diamond, Joseph M.
Author_Institution
Electronics Division, Danish Atomic Energy Commission, Risö, Roskilde, Denmark. He is on leave (through June 1970) as Visiting Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering at the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Issue
2
fYear
1970
fDate
4/1/1970 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
109
Lastpage
117
Abstract
An inductive conductivity meter is described, especially adapted as a salinity monitor for dialysis water. Salinity are given. The principal problems of the inductive conductivity meter result from the low conductivity of electrolytes. The weak coupling due to the electrolyte means that stray coupling must be reduced to a very low level. This has been accomplished by means of a heavy copper eddy-current shield, which reduces the unwanted coupling to a level corresponding to a conductivity increment of the order of 10-8 ¿-1. cm-1. The effect of parasitic impedances in the receiver core are minimized by designing this core as a current transformer, rather than a voltage transformer. The operating frequency is 5600 Hz. The circuits are described, including the oscillator, current-sensitive preamplifier, phase-sensitive detector, dc amplifiers, and alarm circuits. The phase-sensitive detector uses ordinary planar transistors and does not require a square wave reference signal.
Keywords
Conductivity; Copper; Coupling circuits; Current transformers; Frequency; Impedance; Monitoring; Phase detection; Transformer cores; Voltage transformers; Dialysis; Electric Conductivity; Electronics, Medical; Monitoring, Physiologic; Salts; Water;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.1970.4502708
Filename
4502708
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