Abstract

In the development of suitable standards and calibration materials for fluorescence measurement, it becomes necessary to make accurate fluorescence measurements of these materials on flow cytometers. The results of such measurements may be affected by numerous sources of error, prominent among which are deviations of logarithmic amplifiers (log amps) from ideal response. To minimize the deleterious effects of log amps and multicolor fluorescence compensation circuitry on measurements, we built a flow cytometer with electronics incorporating high-precision peak detectors usable over a range from below 2 mV to 10 V, and we developed data acquisition software that transfers held peak values to a commercial 16-bit data acquisition system mounted in a personal computer running Windows 95. Fluorescence compensation is done in software, and transformation of the compensated data from a 16-bit linear to an 8-bit, 4-decade logarithmic scale is accomplished using a look-up table. Although dynamic range may be restricted by noise in the data acquisition system, high sensitivity can be achieved by photomultiplier tube gain adjustment, and it is likely that the use of a lower noise data acquisition system and/or digital processing of pulse information will enable operation over the full 4-decade dynamic range. Even at its current performance level, our instrument provides substantially better linearity over most of the scale than can be obtained using conventional electronics incorporating log amps; we believe this characteristic is critical for use in standards development.

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