• CO2 Analysis Seven-Miles Deep

Laboratory Products

CO2 Analysis Seven-Miles Deep

Jun 01 2012

At almost seven miles down, carbon dioxide management is critical for life support. On 26th March 2012, with James Cameron at 35,756 feet under the waves on the seabed of the Mariana Trench, he and the Deepsea Challenge team needed real-time live data on the levels of oxygen (O2), carbon dioxide (CO2), air temperature and humidity in the sub. Those four readings from a specially modified Geotech G100 CO2 gas analyser went via a USB link into the sub’s laptop computer display and to the surface via its radio telemetry link. Monitoring O2, CO2, temperature and humidity by the Geotech G100 added to other data about the Deepsea Challenger sub’s life support systems.

James Cameron spent several hours on the bottom documenting what he saw and collecting samples. Making the first successful solo dive to the Mariana Trench was an historic achievement by Deepsea Challenge, a joint scientific expedition of James Cameron, National Geographic and Rolex.

The Deepsea Challenge team chose the G100 because of its small size, just 165x100x55mm. The G100 is in use around the world to verify life-critical conditions in medical CO2 incubators for stem-cell research, IVF embryo development and micro-biology, so the Geotech G100 CO2 analyser has a tried-and-tested medical gas pedigree. Instead of its usual flying leads to measure temperature and humidity within CO2 incubators, the Geotech team altered the setup for the G100 so it had its probes attached to the unit, as does the Geotech G110 gas analyser. They purpose-built other components during manufacture and then individually programed each of the five units. The Geotech team rapidly developed bespoke software to run on the sub’s laptop to read the live data from the G100 analyser via USB.

Commenting on the all-round success, Geotech MD, Steve Billingham said, “We congratulate Deepsea Challenge on this historic success and are enormously proud to have been a part of it with our specialism in portable gas analysers. We have hyperbaric breathing air analysers working routinely on submarines but at this depth, this is also a record for us.”

 


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