Issue 1, 2021

Temporally resolved thermal desorption of volatile organics from nanoporous silica preconcentrator

Abstract

Detection and separation of gas-phase volatile organic compounds (VOCs) is of great importance for many applications including air quality monitoring, toxic gas detection and medical diagnostics. A lack of small and low-cost detectors limits the potential applications of VOC gas sensors, especially in the areas of consumer products and the ‘Internet of Things’. Most of the commercially available low-cost technologies are either only capable of measuring a single VOC type, or only provide a total VOC concentration, without the ability to provide information on the nature or type of the VOC. We present a new approach for improving the selectivity of VOC detection, based on temporally resolved thermal desorption of VOCs from a nanoporous material, which can be combined with any existing VOC detector. This work uses a nanoporous silica material that adsorbs VOC molecules, which are then thermally desorbed onto a broadband VOC detector. Different VOCs are desorbed at different temperatures depending on their boiling point and affinity to the porous surface. The nanoporous silica is inert; VOC adsorption is proportional to the concentration of VOC in the environment, and is fully reversible. An example of a detection system using a commercial total VOC photoionization detector and a nanoporous silica preconcentrator is demonstrated here for six different VOCs, and shows potential for discrimination between the VOCs.

Graphical abstract: Temporally resolved thermal desorption of volatile organics from nanoporous silica preconcentrator

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Sep 2020
Accepted
02 Nov 2020
First published
03 Nov 2020

Analyst, 2021,146, 109-117

Temporally resolved thermal desorption of volatile organics from nanoporous silica preconcentrator

W. Winter, C. Day, J. Prestage and T. Hutter, Analyst, 2021, 146, 109 DOI: 10.1039/D0AN01822H

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