Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10561495 | Talanta | 2005 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
The development of a catalytic chemiluminescent trimethylamine (TMA) sensor is demonstrated in the present paper. Intensive chemiluminescence (CL) is detected when TMA is introduced over the surface of nanosized catalysts and subsequently catalytically oxidized by O2 from the air, and four catalysts are investigated with the strongest CL intensity obtained on nanosized Y2O3. This effect is utilized to develop a novel nanosized Y2O3-based catalytic CL sensor for TMA which under optimal conditions exhibits a wide linear range of 60-42,000Â ppm and a detection limit of 10Â ppm. An attractive advantage of this novel CL sensor is its high selectivity to TMA with negligible responses to many other gases such as NH3 and organic vapors. This CL sensor has a short response time of less than 3Â s, and shows good stability when examined by continual introduction of TMA into the sensor for 96Â h. The applicability of this sensor to actual fish samples is also demonstrated in the paper.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Zhenyu Zhang, Ke Xu, Zhi Xing, Xinrong Zhang,