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New Electrochemical and Optical Detection Methods for Biological and Environmental Applications

Date Issued
August 1, 2010
Author(s)
Dansby-Sparks, Royce Nicholas
Advisor(s)
Zi-Ling (Ben) Xue
Additional Advisor(s)
Michael D. Best, Michael J. Sepaniak, Hong Guo
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/29062
Abstract

Detection of chromium and vanadium is of interest for biomedical and environmental applications. The two metals have narrow limits between being essential and toxic for humans. Ultra-sensitive techniques have been studied to measure Cr and V at low concentrations found in human blood and environmental samples. Bismuth film and mercury-alloy electrodes have been developed as alternatives to traditional Hg-based electrodes for Cr and V detection. While catalytic adsorptive stripping voltammetry (CAdSV) has been used to detect Cr and V, little is known about the process. The mechanisms of CAdSV have been probed to provide a better understanding of its exceptional sensitivity and selectivity.


Near-real time monitoring of plume gas constituents is desired as a diagnostic tool for combustion efficiency, ensuring safe testing conditions and observing releases of green house gasses. Ground testing rockets is a crucial preliminary step that ensures their performance during critical space missions. Optical sol-gel sensors for carbon dioxide have been developed for remote sensing applications. They are inexpensive and are compatible with the harsh environments encountered during rocket plume tests. The sensors are a viable approach to compliment current infrared (IR) measurements for real-time carbon dioxide detection. Additional work on kerosene and isopropyl alcohol sensing has been explored for incorporation into a multi-analyte sensing platform.

Subjects

Electrochemistry

Optical Sensors

Sol-gels

Catalytic Adsorptive ...

Disciplines
Analytical Chemistry
Environmental Chemistry
Inorganic Chemistry
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Major
Chemistry
Embargo Date
December 1, 2011
File(s)
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Thesis_Royce_Final.pdf

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4.61 MB

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Adobe PDF

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Thesis_Royce_final_royce_1.doc

Size

184.41 MB

Format

Microsoft Word

Checksum (MD5)

1c62630b58d8435995c0604c6a9ddefd

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