Publication | Open Access
Raman Spectroscopy Coupled with Chemometric Analysis for Speciation and Quantitative Analysis of Aqueous Phosphoric Acid Systems
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Citations
24
References
2021
Year
EngineeringSurface-enhanced Raman ScatteringChemistrySpectrochemical AnalysisChemical EngineeringEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental Analytical ChemistryRaman Spectroscopy CoupledQuantitative AnalysisAnalytical ChemistryOptical SpectroscopyBiophysicsChromatographyChemometric AnalysisBiochemistryChemometricsChemometric MethodComplex Chemical SystemsNatural SciencesSpectroscopySpectroscopic MethodRaman Signal
Complex chemical systems that exhibit varied and matrix-dependent speciation are notoriously difficult to monitor and characterize online and in real-time. Optical spectroscopy is an ideal tool for in situ characterization of chemical species that can enable quantification as well as species identification. Chemometric modeling, a multivariate method, has been successfully paired with optical spectroscopy to enable measurement of analyte concentrations even in complex solutions where univariate methods such as Beer's law analysis fail. Here, Raman spectroscopy is used to quantify the concentration of phosphoric acid and its three deprotonated forms during a titration. In this system, univariate approaches would be difficult to apply due to multiple species being present simultaneously within the solution as the pH is varied. Locally weighted regression (LWR) modeling was used to determine phosphate concentration from spectral signature. LWR results, in tandem with multivariate curve resolution modeling, provide a direct measurement of the concentration of each phosphate species using only the Raman signal. Furthermore, results are presented within the context of fundamental solution chemistry, including Pitzer equations, to compensate for activity coefficients and nonidealities associated with high ionic strength systems.
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