EC/IR II comes to Virginia breath alcohol testing
Posted: Saturday, June 28, 2008
by Bob Keefer
Keefer Law Firm
On April 23, 2008, Virginia entered into a contract to purchase a new breath tester. On that same day, in accordance with its Regulations for Breath Alcohol Testing, Virginia began listing Intoximeter's EC/IR II with the Virginia test protocol as an approved breath test device.
Alka Lohmann is the chief of Virginia's unaccredited breath alcohol section. At the May 5, 2008 Scientific Advisory Committee meeting, Ms. Lohmann gave a status report on the EC/IR II. She reported that out of 50 states this tester is used in only four states besides Virginia: West Virginia, Wisconsin, North Carolina and Tennessee. Ms. Lohmann did not indicate why only 10% of the states used the EC/IR II. She stated that the new tester offered enhanced communication capabilities, increased trouble shooting form the lab and the ability to use a dry gas.
In analytical chemistry, the analysis of a substance must be corroborated by an independent, alternative analytical analysis. Agreement between the two different analytical methods insures the reliability of the results.
The name EC/IR II implies that the machine will measure the subject's alcohol concentration in two methods: EC (electrochemical or fuel cell) and IR (infrared technology). By this method, the device guarantees the reliability of its results through using different tests. This internal corroboration would give the EC/IR II a distinct reliability advantage over devices utilizing only one technology.
Unfortunately, Intoximeter was unable to coordinate the different analytical methods. Because of that failure, the instrument does not use two independent methods to measure alcohol concentration. Instead, the EC/IR II uses only the fuel cell to measure alcohol and determine blood alcohol content. The IR is employed only to detect mouth alcohol through a slope detector.
The fuel cell component does not have the ability to detect mouth alcohol. The fuel cell merely reports the total concentration of alcohol present with registering the presence of mouth alcohol.
Over time, fuel cells change in sensitivity and must be calibrated frequently to retain accuracy. IR detectors do not require calibration every few weeks. When the electrode microstructure changes it causes drift in the sensor baseline. That drift takes the EC out of sych with the IR detector.
Recalibrations of the instrument every couple of weeks is very time consuming. Some states have resolved that issue by disabling the IR detector entirely. Once the IR detector is disabled the device has no capacity for detecting mouth alcohol.
Copyright (c) 2008 Robert Keefer
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