Issue 9, 2010

Amperometric measurement of gaseous hydrogen sulfidevia a Clark-type approach

Abstract

The direct oxidation of hydrogen sulfide in the range 2.0–20 parts per million by volume (ppmv) using a Clark-type amperometric gas sensing methodology is investigated via amperometric transients at 298 K. The diluent gas employed is air (20.9% O2 in N2), and it is shown that the observed current transients are limited by transport through the membrane covering, reaching a steady-state value within at least 200 s for one of the manifestations described. The measurement system presented is shown to be operational over a long time (tens of hours), provided certain quantification protocols are employed; the latter are suggested as pragmatic guidelines for the deployment of this detection methodology. Importantly and notably, it is shown that readily-oxidizable gases such as carbon monoxide and molecular hydrogen are observed not to interfere with the measurement quantification.

Graphical abstract: Amperometric measurement of gaseous hydrogen sulfide via a Clark-type approach

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 May 2010
Accepted
21 Jun 2010
First published
10 Aug 2010

Anal. Methods, 2010,2, 1346-1354

Amperometric measurement of gaseous hydrogen sulfide via a Clark-type approach

J. J. Horn, T. Mccreedy and J. Wadhawan, Anal. Methods, 2010, 2, 1346 DOI: 10.1039/C0AY00338G

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