Publication | Closed Access
Highly Sensitive Capacitive Gas Sensing at Ionic Liquid–Electrode Interfaces
32
Citations
27
References
2015
Year
Chemical EngineeringEngineeringSo2 DetectionElectrified Ionic LiquidGas SensorIonic ConductorAnalytical ChemistryDifferential CapacitanceChemistryGas DetectionElectroanalytical SensorChemical SensorIonic Liquid–electrode InterfacesElectrochemical Gas SensorElectrochemistry
We have developed an ultrasensitive gas-detection method based on the measurement of a differential capacitance of electrified ionic liquid (IL) electrode interfaces in the presence and absence of adsorbed gas molecules. The observed change of differential capacitance has a local maximum at a certain potential that is unique for each type of gas, and its amplitude is related to the concentration of the gas molecules. We establish and validate this gas-sensing method by characterizing SO2 detection at ppb levels with less than 1.8% signal from other interfering species (i.e., CO2, O2, NO2, NO, SO2, H2O, H2, and cyclohexane, tested at the same concentration as SO2). This study opens a new avenue of utilizing tunable electrified IL-electrode interfaces for selective sensing of molecules with a kinetic size resolution of 0.1 Å.
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