A Portable Secret for Detecting Camphor Gas
Wed Dec 18 2024
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Did you know that detecting camphor in the air is a big deal for the pharmaceutical industry? Current methods, like chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-MS), are complex and not portable. Imagine if we could create a simple, portable sensor to do this job!
Scientists have been experimenting with polyaniline (PANi) and PVAc nanofibers. They found that a thin layer of PANi on these nanofibers can detect camphor gas using a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) system. The QCM system measures changes in the sensor's weight when it interacts with camphor gas.
Increasing the amount of PANi on the sensor surface makes it more sensitive to camphor gas. A sensor with just 0. 08% PANi (called Nano-PANi8) had a sensitivity of 2. 594 Hz per ppm of camphor gas. Compare that to a sensor with no PANi, which only had a sensitivity of 0. 305 Hz per ppm!
This sensor also has great repeatability and can respond to and recover from camphor gas quickly. It takes just 47 seconds to respond and 133 seconds to recover. Plus, it's super selective—it can tell camphor gas apart from other gases. And it stays stable for three whole weeks!
The best part? This sensor can be portable, thanks to the QCM system. It's like having a tiny, efficient camphor gas detector in your pocket!
https://localnews.ai/article/a-portable-secret-for-detecting-camphor-gas-f71cf7e3
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