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FT-IR-cPAS—New Photoacoustic Measurement Technique for Analysis of Hot Gases: A Case Study on VOCs

This article describes a new photoacoustic FT-IR system capable of operating at elevated temperatures. The key hardware component is an optical-readout cantilever microphone that can work up to 200 °C. All parts in contact with the sample gas were put into a heated oven, incl. the photoacoustic cell...

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Autores principales: Hirschmann, Christian Bernd, Koivikko, Niina Susanna, Raittila, Jussi, Tenhunen, Jussi, Ojala, Satu, Rahkamaa-Tolonen, Katariina, Marbach, Ralf, Hirschmann, Sarah, Keiski, Riitta Liisa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3231378/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22163900
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s110505270
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author Hirschmann, Christian Bernd
Koivikko, Niina Susanna
Raittila, Jussi
Tenhunen, Jussi
Ojala, Satu
Rahkamaa-Tolonen, Katariina
Marbach, Ralf
Hirschmann, Sarah
Keiski, Riitta Liisa
author_facet Hirschmann, Christian Bernd
Koivikko, Niina Susanna
Raittila, Jussi
Tenhunen, Jussi
Ojala, Satu
Rahkamaa-Tolonen, Katariina
Marbach, Ralf
Hirschmann, Sarah
Keiski, Riitta Liisa
author_sort Hirschmann, Christian Bernd
collection PubMed
description This article describes a new photoacoustic FT-IR system capable of operating at elevated temperatures. The key hardware component is an optical-readout cantilever microphone that can work up to 200 °C. All parts in contact with the sample gas were put into a heated oven, incl. the photoacoustic cell. The sensitivity of the built photoacoustic system was tested by measuring 18 different VOCs. At 100 ppm gas concentration, the univariate signal to noise ratios (1σ, measurement time 25.5 min, at highest peak, optical resolution 8 cm(−1)) of the spectra varied from minimally 19 for o-xylene up to 329 for butyl acetate. The sensitivity can be improved by multivariate analyses over broad wavelength ranges, which effectively co-adds the univariate sensitivities achievable at individual wavelengths. The multivariate limit of detection (3σ, 8.5 min, full useful wavelength range), i.e., the best possible inverse analytical sensitivity achievable at optimum calibration, was calculated using the SBC method and varied from 2.60 ppm for dichloromethane to 0.33 ppm for butyl acetate. Depending on the shape of the spectra, which often only contain a few sharp peaks, the multivariate analysis improved the analytical sensitivity by 2.2 to 9.2 times compared to the univariate case. Selectivity and multi component ability were tested by a SBC calibration including 5 VOCs and water. The average cross selectivities turned out to be less than 2% and the resulting inverse analytical sensitivities of the 5 interfering VOCs was increased by maximum factor of 2.2 compared to the single component sensitivities. Water subtraction using SBC gave the true analyte concentration with a variation coefficient of 3%, although the sample spectra (methyl ethyl ketone, 200 ppm) contained water from 1,400 to 100k ppm and for subtraction only one water spectra (10k ppm) was used. The developed device shows significant improvement to the current state-of-the-art measurement methods used in industrial VOC measurements.
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spelling pubmed-32313782011-12-07 FT-IR-cPAS—New Photoacoustic Measurement Technique for Analysis of Hot Gases: A Case Study on VOCs Hirschmann, Christian Bernd Koivikko, Niina Susanna Raittila, Jussi Tenhunen, Jussi Ojala, Satu Rahkamaa-Tolonen, Katariina Marbach, Ralf Hirschmann, Sarah Keiski, Riitta Liisa Sensors (Basel) Article This article describes a new photoacoustic FT-IR system capable of operating at elevated temperatures. The key hardware component is an optical-readout cantilever microphone that can work up to 200 °C. All parts in contact with the sample gas were put into a heated oven, incl. the photoacoustic cell. The sensitivity of the built photoacoustic system was tested by measuring 18 different VOCs. At 100 ppm gas concentration, the univariate signal to noise ratios (1σ, measurement time 25.5 min, at highest peak, optical resolution 8 cm(−1)) of the spectra varied from minimally 19 for o-xylene up to 329 for butyl acetate. The sensitivity can be improved by multivariate analyses over broad wavelength ranges, which effectively co-adds the univariate sensitivities achievable at individual wavelengths. The multivariate limit of detection (3σ, 8.5 min, full useful wavelength range), i.e., the best possible inverse analytical sensitivity achievable at optimum calibration, was calculated using the SBC method and varied from 2.60 ppm for dichloromethane to 0.33 ppm for butyl acetate. Depending on the shape of the spectra, which often only contain a few sharp peaks, the multivariate analysis improved the analytical sensitivity by 2.2 to 9.2 times compared to the univariate case. Selectivity and multi component ability were tested by a SBC calibration including 5 VOCs and water. The average cross selectivities turned out to be less than 2% and the resulting inverse analytical sensitivities of the 5 interfering VOCs was increased by maximum factor of 2.2 compared to the single component sensitivities. Water subtraction using SBC gave the true analyte concentration with a variation coefficient of 3%, although the sample spectra (methyl ethyl ketone, 200 ppm) contained water from 1,400 to 100k ppm and for subtraction only one water spectra (10k ppm) was used. The developed device shows significant improvement to the current state-of-the-art measurement methods used in industrial VOC measurements. Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2011-05-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3231378/ /pubmed/22163900 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s110505270 Text en © 2011 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hirschmann, Christian Bernd
Koivikko, Niina Susanna
Raittila, Jussi
Tenhunen, Jussi
Ojala, Satu
Rahkamaa-Tolonen, Katariina
Marbach, Ralf
Hirschmann, Sarah
Keiski, Riitta Liisa
FT-IR-cPAS—New Photoacoustic Measurement Technique for Analysis of Hot Gases: A Case Study on VOCs
title FT-IR-cPAS—New Photoacoustic Measurement Technique for Analysis of Hot Gases: A Case Study on VOCs
title_full FT-IR-cPAS—New Photoacoustic Measurement Technique for Analysis of Hot Gases: A Case Study on VOCs
title_fullStr FT-IR-cPAS—New Photoacoustic Measurement Technique for Analysis of Hot Gases: A Case Study on VOCs
title_full_unstemmed FT-IR-cPAS—New Photoacoustic Measurement Technique for Analysis of Hot Gases: A Case Study on VOCs
title_short FT-IR-cPAS—New Photoacoustic Measurement Technique for Analysis of Hot Gases: A Case Study on VOCs
title_sort ft-ir-cpas—new photoacoustic measurement technique for analysis of hot gases: a case study on vocs
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3231378/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22163900
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s110505270
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