Publication | Closed Access
Mid-Infrared Spectroscopic Method for the Identification and Quantification of Dissolved Oil Components in Marine Environments
33
Citations
33
References
2015
Year
Environmental MonitoringEngineeringMir-atr SensorMarine SensorMarine ChemistryOceanographyMarine EnvironmentsSpectrochemical AnalysisEarth ScienceEnvironmental ChemistryChemical EngineeringMid-infrared Spectroscopic MethodEnvironmental Analytical ChemistryMarine PollutionOil SpillAnalytical ChemistryChromatographyChemical OceanographyInfrared SpectroscopyWater QualityNear-infrared SpectroscopyTotal ReflectanceAttenuated Total ReflectionWater AnalysisEnvironmental EngineeringSpectroscopyDissolved Oil ComponentsOil Spill MonitoringMarine Biology
The use of mid-infrared sensors based on conventional spectroscopic equipment for oil spill monitoring and fingerprinting in aqueous systems has to date been mainly confined to laboratory environments. This paper presents a portable-based mid-infrared attenuated total reflectance (MIR-ATR) sensor system that was used to quantify a number of environmentally relevant hydrocarbon contaminants in marine water. The sensor comprises a polymer-coated diamond waveguide in combination with a room-temperature operated pyroelectric detector, and the analytical performance was optimized by evaluating the influence of polymer composition, polymer film thickness, and solution flow rate on the sensor response. Uncertainties regarding the analytical performance and instrument specifications for dissolved oil detection were investigated using real-world seawater matrices. The reliability of the sensor was tested by exposition to known volumes of different oils; crude oil and diesel samples were equilibrated with seawater and then analyzed using the developed MIR-ATR sensor system. For validation, gas chromatographic measurements were performed revealing that the MIR-ATR sensor is a promising on-site monitoring tool for determining the concentration of a range of dissolved oil components in seawater at ppb to ppm levels.
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