Team:Oxford/how much can we degrade
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- | <h1blue2> | + | <h1blue2>How could we measure the pH?</h1blue2> |
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+ | As we’ve built the model predicting the pH change very accurately, we have been thinking about how to use this clear system change to our advantage. There are two viable options that we’ve thought about. | ||
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+ | By using a pH indicator that changes colour at a pH of around 6, we could use the same electronics that we’ve developed for detecting the fluorescence of the sfGFP in the biosensor to detect the colour change, and therefore the point at which the pH becomes dangerously low. This has the advantage of making the biosensor very user friendly, it would be a matter of the user choosing whether to detect the DCM drop using pH or the reporting bacteria. A second advantage is that it would be much cheaper. | ||
+ | The other option is to use a commercially available digital pH meter to signal a warning when the pH gets too low. This has the advantage of being more accurate and isn’t much more expensive. | ||
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+ | <h1blue2>How is the pH useful?</h1blue2> | ||
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+ | The pH is an indirect measure of the amount of DCM that we’ve degraded. It is then therefore possible to calculate the correct amount of water to add to a certain amount of DCM to ensure the pH stays high enough. If no buffer solution is added, initial calculations point (see the graph) towards there being a very big difference between the relative volumes of the amount of DCM added and the volume of the aqueous layer. This highlights the importance of using a pH buffer solution in the aqueous layer. | ||
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+ | Therefore, the system that detects the amount of DCM that we’ve degraded could link the digital pH read out to the initial amount of water added. | ||
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Revision as of 22:31, 21 September 2014
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