4.7 Article

Towards an automated, standardized protocol for determination of equilibrium potential of ion-selective electrodes

Journal

ANALYTICA CHIMICA ACTA
Volume 690, Issue 1, Pages 71-78

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.aca.2011.02.011

Keywords

Ion selective electrodes; Equilibration detection; Automation

Funding

  1. GSA
  2. MIT-Xerox Fellowship
  3. Martin Foundation Sustainability Fellowship
  4. NSF
  5. NSF EAR [0330272]
  6. Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology
  7. [6919676]
  8. Directorate For Geosciences
  9. Division Of Earth Sciences [0330272] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

An automated real-time method for determination of ISE steady state value and response time is developed, following most recent IUPAC recommendations. Specifically, detection of the 'steady state' is related to (1) the time derivative of the emf as it reaches a limiting value (Delta E/Delta t(limt), e.g., 0.1-1.0 my min(-1)) and (2) the duration of time for which the absolute value of the time derivative remains less than this limiting value (stability window, denoted win(st)). A suite of representative ISEs, including glass, solid state, and polymer-based electrodes, is examined to determine sensitivity of results to parameterization choice. Measurements taken over a wide range of concentration values and in un-processed samples (i.e., without use of ionic strength adjustment) provide insight into behavior of ISEs in applications where analyte concentrations span a wide range and/or sample pre-processing may not be an option, e.g., use of sensors for in situ environmental sampling. Results show that declared steady state emf is strongly sensitive to variations in Delta E/Delta t(limt) but relatively unaffected by changes in the stability window when win(st) >= 30s. Linearity of calibration curves produced, quantified by root mean squared error (RMSE) against a linear fit, improves as Delta E/Delta t(limt) decreases, however the percentage of measurements which reach a declared steady state within the prescribed sample window (similar to 6.5 min) falls with corresponding decreases in the Delta E/Delta t(limt) parameter. Response time, defined as the time required to reach declared steady emf, is also a strong function of parameterization. Dependence of response times on sample composition and/or ISE membrane composition and type are also discussed; results for ISEs in samples comprised exclusively of interfering ions are included. In general, limiting emf derivatives of {0.25-0.4 mV min(-1)} and stability windows of {30-405} achieve both good analytical accuracy and compliance with potentially short sampling window requirements. Methodology based on use of these parameters can improve sampling speed and accuracy as well as promote inter-comparison of data and ISE characterizations among research teams. (C) 2011 Elsevier BM. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available