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Beyond Karl Fischer titration: a monolithic quantum cascade sensor for monitoring residual water concentration in solvents

Quality control of liquids is an important part of analytical chemistry. The gold standard for measuring residual water in organic solvents and pharmaceutical applications is Karl Fischer titration. It has a high sensitivity, selectivity and accuracy. The downsides are a time-consuming offline analy...

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Autores principales: Pilat, Florian, Schwarz, Benedikt, Baumgartner, Bettina, Ristanić, Daniela, Detz, Hermann, Andrews, Aaron M., Lendl, Bernhard, Strasser, Gottfried, Hinkov, Borislav
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10045895/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36800171
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2lc00724j
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author Pilat, Florian
Schwarz, Benedikt
Baumgartner, Bettina
Ristanić, Daniela
Detz, Hermann
Andrews, Aaron M.
Lendl, Bernhard
Strasser, Gottfried
Hinkov, Borislav
author_facet Pilat, Florian
Schwarz, Benedikt
Baumgartner, Bettina
Ristanić, Daniela
Detz, Hermann
Andrews, Aaron M.
Lendl, Bernhard
Strasser, Gottfried
Hinkov, Borislav
author_sort Pilat, Florian
collection PubMed
description Quality control of liquids is an important part of analytical chemistry. The gold standard for measuring residual water in organic solvents and pharmaceutical applications is Karl Fischer titration. It has a high sensitivity, selectivity and accuracy. The downsides are a time-consuming offline analysis, together with the need for toxic reagents producing waste, and it suffers from poor inter-laboratory reproducibility. In this work, we present a high-performance lab-on-a-chip sensor exploiting mid-IR spectroscopy for liquid sensing. It is operating at 6.1 μm wavelength and is suitable for robust and flexible real-time in situ analysis of the residual water concentration in isopropyl alcohol. This is demonstrated in two experiments. A custom-made 60 μL flow cell is employed to measure only minute amounts of analyte in an inline configuration. In a second approach, the whole sensor is immersed into the analyte to demonstrate sensitive and rapid in situ operation on the millisecond time scale. This is confirmed by the ability for time resolved single water-droplet monitoring, while they are mixed into the liquid sample. We obtain a limit of detection between 120 ppm and 150 ppm with a concentration coverage spanning three orders of magnitude from 1.2 × 10(−2)%(vol) to 25%(vol) for the flow cell and 1.5 × 10(−2)%(vol) to 19%(vol) in the in situ configuration, respectively.
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spelling pubmed-100458952023-03-29 Beyond Karl Fischer titration: a monolithic quantum cascade sensor for monitoring residual water concentration in solvents Pilat, Florian Schwarz, Benedikt Baumgartner, Bettina Ristanić, Daniela Detz, Hermann Andrews, Aaron M. Lendl, Bernhard Strasser, Gottfried Hinkov, Borislav Lab Chip Chemistry Quality control of liquids is an important part of analytical chemistry. The gold standard for measuring residual water in organic solvents and pharmaceutical applications is Karl Fischer titration. It has a high sensitivity, selectivity and accuracy. The downsides are a time-consuming offline analysis, together with the need for toxic reagents producing waste, and it suffers from poor inter-laboratory reproducibility. In this work, we present a high-performance lab-on-a-chip sensor exploiting mid-IR spectroscopy for liquid sensing. It is operating at 6.1 μm wavelength and is suitable for robust and flexible real-time in situ analysis of the residual water concentration in isopropyl alcohol. This is demonstrated in two experiments. A custom-made 60 μL flow cell is employed to measure only minute amounts of analyte in an inline configuration. In a second approach, the whole sensor is immersed into the analyte to demonstrate sensitive and rapid in situ operation on the millisecond time scale. This is confirmed by the ability for time resolved single water-droplet monitoring, while they are mixed into the liquid sample. We obtain a limit of detection between 120 ppm and 150 ppm with a concentration coverage spanning three orders of magnitude from 1.2 × 10(−2)%(vol) to 25%(vol) for the flow cell and 1.5 × 10(−2)%(vol) to 19%(vol) in the in situ configuration, respectively. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-02-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10045895/ /pubmed/36800171 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2lc00724j Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Pilat, Florian
Schwarz, Benedikt
Baumgartner, Bettina
Ristanić, Daniela
Detz, Hermann
Andrews, Aaron M.
Lendl, Bernhard
Strasser, Gottfried
Hinkov, Borislav
Beyond Karl Fischer titration: a monolithic quantum cascade sensor for monitoring residual water concentration in solvents
title Beyond Karl Fischer titration: a monolithic quantum cascade sensor for monitoring residual water concentration in solvents
title_full Beyond Karl Fischer titration: a monolithic quantum cascade sensor for monitoring residual water concentration in solvents
title_fullStr Beyond Karl Fischer titration: a monolithic quantum cascade sensor for monitoring residual water concentration in solvents
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Karl Fischer titration: a monolithic quantum cascade sensor for monitoring residual water concentration in solvents
title_short Beyond Karl Fischer titration: a monolithic quantum cascade sensor for monitoring residual water concentration in solvents
title_sort beyond karl fischer titration: a monolithic quantum cascade sensor for monitoring residual water concentration in solvents
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10045895/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36800171
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2lc00724j
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