TY - JOUR
T1 - On-site smartphone detection of ethanol content using paper-based colorimetric polydiacetylene sensor arrays
AU - Wang, Dong En
AU - Yan, Changhan
AU - Bai, Sirui
AU - Zhang, Yaping
AU - Huo, Wenjing
AU - Ning, Kaiting
AU - Zhao, Lei
AU - Yang, Hui
AU - Xu, Huiyun
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2024/3/1
Y1 - 2024/3/1
N2 - The accelerated consumption of ethanol in pharmaceutical, food and fuel industries instinctively actuates the development of simple, portable, reliable and inexpensive sensing method for ethanol content monitoring. Herein, a paper-based polydiacetylene (PDA) sensor array is prepared from four diacetylene (DA) monomers modified with imidazole and its derivates. DA inks derived from the four monomers are directly coated on A4 paper via inkjet printing and converted to PDAs by UV irradiation with high stability and uniformity. The printed PDA sensors show solvent induced irreversible color transition upon exposure to organic solvents and water. The diverse colorimetric responses integrally provide unique color change patterns which are capable of distinguishing 11 distinct solvents including ethanol and water. The pattern-based sensing performance further promotes the fabrication of spot-matrix sensor array that could generate distinct color difference maps towards different ethanol contents with multiple sensing elements and a widely dynamic sensing range from 0 to 100%. Combined with RGB value radar map and principal component analysis (PCA), the sensor array also displays excellent ability of differentiating ethanol content from 5 to 100%. With this proposed method, commercial spirit samples with different ethanol contents or gasolines with different amounts of ethanol are readily distinguished and identified through naked eye and PCA score plot. Furthermore, to facilitate usability, a smartphone app is developed and integrated with the PDA sensor array, which directly enables read-out of the ethanol content in real liquor samples with high accuracy. Considering the simplicity, portability and reliability of the proposed sensing system, this study offers a promising method for point-of-use detection of ethanol content that may find broad applications in terms of quality control, food safety inspection and consumer protection.
AB - The accelerated consumption of ethanol in pharmaceutical, food and fuel industries instinctively actuates the development of simple, portable, reliable and inexpensive sensing method for ethanol content monitoring. Herein, a paper-based polydiacetylene (PDA) sensor array is prepared from four diacetylene (DA) monomers modified with imidazole and its derivates. DA inks derived from the four monomers are directly coated on A4 paper via inkjet printing and converted to PDAs by UV irradiation with high stability and uniformity. The printed PDA sensors show solvent induced irreversible color transition upon exposure to organic solvents and water. The diverse colorimetric responses integrally provide unique color change patterns which are capable of distinguishing 11 distinct solvents including ethanol and water. The pattern-based sensing performance further promotes the fabrication of spot-matrix sensor array that could generate distinct color difference maps towards different ethanol contents with multiple sensing elements and a widely dynamic sensing range from 0 to 100%. Combined with RGB value radar map and principal component analysis (PCA), the sensor array also displays excellent ability of differentiating ethanol content from 5 to 100%. With this proposed method, commercial spirit samples with different ethanol contents or gasolines with different amounts of ethanol are readily distinguished and identified through naked eye and PCA score plot. Furthermore, to facilitate usability, a smartphone app is developed and integrated with the PDA sensor array, which directly enables read-out of the ethanol content in real liquor samples with high accuracy. Considering the simplicity, portability and reliability of the proposed sensing system, this study offers a promising method for point-of-use detection of ethanol content that may find broad applications in terms of quality control, food safety inspection and consumer protection.
KW - Ethanol sensing
KW - Paper-based sensing array
KW - Polydiacetylene
KW - Smartphone detection
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85183995583&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.cej.2024.149215
DO - 10.1016/j.cej.2024.149215
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85183995583
SN - 1385-8947
VL - 483
JO - Chemical Engineering Journal
JF - Chemical Engineering Journal
M1 - 149215
ER -