Core Practical 16: Respirometer to Calculate RQ (Edexcel International A Level Biology): Revision Note
Using a Respirometer to Calculate RQ
Respirometers are used to measure and investigate the rate of oxygen consumption during respiration in organisms
They can also be used to calculate respiratory quotients
The experiments usually involve organisms such as seeds or invertebrates
Apparatus
Respirometer
Glass beads
Germinating seeds
These will be actively respiring and consuming oxygen
Test tubes
Soda-lime pellets (or potassium hydroxide)
To absorb the carbon dioxide produced
Stopwatch
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A respirometer set up to measure the rate of respiration
Method
Measure oxygen consumption: set up the respirometer and run the experiment with both tubes for a set amount of time (e.g. 30 minutes)
As the seeds consume oxygen, the volume of air in the test tube will decrease (CO2 produced during respiration is absorbed by soda lime or KOH)
This reduces the pressure in the capillary tube and manometer fluid will move towards the test tube containing the seeds
Measure the distance moved by the liquid in a given time
Use this measurement to calculate the change in gas volume within a given time, x cm3 min-1
Reset the apparatus: allow air to re-enter the tubes via the screw cap and reset the manometer fluid using the syringe
Run the experiment again: remove the soda-lime from both tubes and use the manometer reading to calculate the change in gas volume in a given time, y cm3 min-1
Equation for calculating change in gas volume
The volume of oxygen consumed (cm3 min-1) can be worked out using the diameter of the capillary tube r (cm) and the distance moved by the manometer fluid h (cm) in a minute using the formula:
πr2h
Calculations
x tells us the volume of oxygen consumed by respiration within a given time
y tells us the volume of oxygen consumed by respiration within a given time minus the volume of carbon dioxide produced within a given time
y may be a positive or negative value depending on the direction that the manometer fluid moves (up = positive value, down = negative value)
The two measurements x and y can be used to calculate the RQ
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Equation to calculate RQ values using a respirometer
Worked Example
During a respirometer experiment using blow fly larvae, the volume of oxygen consumed was 2.9 cm3min-1. The soda lime was removed from both test tubes and the experiment was repeated. The change in gas volume was -0.8 cm3min-1. Calculate the RQ value for the blow fly larvae.
Answer:
x = 2.9 cm3min-1
y = -0.8 cm3min-1
Step 1: Write down equation
Step 2: Substitute values
Step 3: Calculate RQ
Interpretation of results
Respirometers can be used in experiments to investigate how different factors affect the RQ of organisms over time
E.g. temperature – using a series of water baths
When an RQ value changes it means the substrate being respired has changed
Some cells may also be using a mixture of substrates in respiration e.g. An RQ value of 0.85 suggests both carbohydrates and lipids are being used
This is because the RQ of glucose is 1 and the RQ of lipids is 0.7
Under normal cell conditions the order substrates are used in respiration: carbohydrates, lipids then proteins
The RQ can also give an indication of under or overfeeding:
An RQ value of more than 1 suggests excessive carbohydrate/calorie intake
An RQ value of less than 0.7 suggests underfeeding
Examiner Tips and Tricks
There are several ways you can manage variables and increase the reliability of results in respirometer experiments:
Use a controlled water bath to keep the temperature constant
Have a control tube with an equal volume of inert material to the volume of the organisms to compensate for changes in atmospheric pressure
Repeat the experiment multiple times and use an average
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