1. Optical sensing of HCl with phenol red doped sol–gels
- Author
-
Cynthia Yee, Wenqun Wang, Kwok-Fan Chow, Jonathan Mann, Alvin Persad, Andrew Bruce Bocarsly, Enju Wang, and Crystal Wong
- Subjects
Carbonic acid ,Phenol red ,Detection limit ,Inorganic chemistry ,Hydrochloric acid ,Protonation ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Hydrolysis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Acetic acid ,chemistry ,Environmental Chemistry ,Spectroscopy ,Benzoic acid - Abstract
A dye doped sol–gel for the sensing of hydrochloric acid in solution and/or gaseous phase is described. The sol–gel is obtained by acidic hydrolysis of tetraethoxysilane (TEOS) and phenyltriethoxysilane (Ph-TriEOS) in the presence of phenol red (PR) and further spin-coating onto glass slides. The sensitive response is based on an increase of the absorption band at 510 nm of phenol red entrapped in the sol–gel casting when exposed to HCl solution or gas, due to protonation of the dye. The detection limit of the sol–gel response to moisturized gaseous HCl is below 12 ppm, and its response to HCl in solution falls in the range of 0.01–6 M. The sol–gel coating has a response time of less than 40 s in steady-state, and life-time of more than a year. Weak acids such as acetic acid, benzoic acid, salicylate acid, citrate acid, and carbonic acid do not interfere the response. The responses in acid solutions are completely reversible. In the gaseous phase, response of HCl appears to be moisture sensitive.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF