| Literature DB >> 25230309 |
Zhiyun Li1, M Jamal Deen2, Shiva Kumar3, P Ravi Selvaganapathy4.
Abstract
Worldwide, the access to safe drinking water is a huge problem. In fact, the number of persons without safe drinking water is increasing, even though it is an essential ingredient for human health and development. The enormity of the problem also makes it a critical environmental and public health issue. Therefore, there is a critical need for easy-to-use, compact and sensitive techniques for water quality monitoring. Raman spectroscopy has been a very powerful technique to characterize chemical composition and has been applied to many areas, including chemistry, food, material science or pharmaceuticals. The development of advanced Raman techniques and improvements in instrumentation, has significantly improved the performance of modern Raman spectrometers so that it can now be used for detection of low concentrations of chemicals such as in-line monitoring of chemical and pharmaceutical contaminants in water. This paper briefly introduces the fundamentals of Raman spectroscopy, reviews the development of Raman instrumentations and discusses advanced and potential Raman techniques for in-line water quality monitoring.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25230309 PMCID: PMC4208224 DOI: 10.3390/s140917275
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
List of water contaminants and the maximum contamination level (MCL) set by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
| Microorganisms | Cryptosporidium | Zero | Gastrointestinal illness | Raman, FTIR |
| Giardia lamblia | Zero | Gastrointestinal illness | Raman | |
| Disinfection by-products | Chlorite | 800 ppb | Anemia, nervous system effects | Raman, NIR |
| Total Trihalomethanes | 80 ppb | Liver, kidney or central nervous system problems, risk of cancer | Raman, MIR, | |
| Disinfectants | Chlorine | 4 ppm | Eye/nose irritation; stomach discomfort | FTIR, NIR, |
| Chlorine dioxide | 800 ppb | Anemia, nervous system effects | Raman, MIR | |
| Inorganic chemicals | Cyanide | 200 ppb | Nerve damage or thyroid problems | Raman |
| Copper | 1.3 ppm | Liver or kidney damage | NIR | |
| Arsenic | 10 ppb | Skin damage or problems with circulatory systems | Raman, MIR, NIR | |
| Organic chemicals | Benzene | 5 ppb | Anemia; decrease in blood platelets; increased risk of cancer | Raman, MIR, NIR |
| Toluene | 1 ppm | Nervous system, kidney, or liver problems | Raman, MIR, NIR | |
| Chlorobenzene | 100 ppb | Liver or kidney problems | MIR | |
| Radionuclides | Uranium | 30 μg/L | Increased risk of cancer, kidney toxicity | Raman |
ppb: parts per billion; ppm: parts per million; FTIR: Fourier transform infrared; NIR: Near infrared; MIR: mid (or middle) infrared.
Figure 1.Energy level diagram related to IR absorption, Raman scattering and fluorescence emission.
Comparison of different optical processes.
| Mid-IR Spectroscopy |
Absorption spectroscopy Fundamental vibration mode Restriction in liquid sample |
Polychromatic source, mid-IR Interferometer, filter IR detector | Pharmaceutical and agricultural applications, food science, microbial cells, clinical chemistry, material science |
| NIR Spectroscopy |
Absorption spectroscopy Overtone and combination Chemometrics |
Polychromatic source, NIR Interferometer, grating CCD, PMT | Clinical chemistry, near infrared tomography, industrial process control, water quality |
| Raman Spectroscopy |
Scattering spectroscopy Fundamental vibration mode Low intensity |
Monochromatic source, UV, visible, NIR Grating , interferometer CCD, PMT | Pharmaceuticals and cosmetics, geology and mineralogy, semiconductor materials characterization, life science, water quality |
| Fluorescence Spectroscopy |
Emission spectroscopy Vibration mode Presence of fluorophores |
Monochromatic source, UV Grating, filter PMT, APD, CCD, SPAD | Biomedical and biochemical analysis of organic samples, fluorescence lifetime imaging |
CCD: charge-coupled device; PMT: photomultiplier tube; APD: avalanche photodiode; SPAD: single photon avalanche diode.
Figure 2.Raman system with: (a) 90° and (b) 180° configurations.
Commercial lasers used in Raman spectrometers and applications.
| NIR source |
Diode laser: 785, 830 nm Solid state laser: Nd-YAG (1064 nm), Ti-Sapphire |
FT-Raman spectroscopy (RS) Normal Raman spectroscopy Surface-enhanced-RS | Biological samples |
| Visible source |
Ion laser: He-Ne (633 nm), He-Cd (442 nm), Ar+ (488 nm, 514 nm) Solid state laser: Nd-YAG (532 nm), Ti-Sapphire |
Normal Raman spectroscopy Surface enhanced -RS Time-resolved Raman spectroscopy Resonance Raman spectroscopy | Organic components |
| UV source |
Ion laser: He-Cd (325 nm), Ar+ (244 nm, 257 nm) Solid state laser pumped dye laser: Ti-Sapphire |
UV Raman spectroscopy Resonance Raman spectroscopy Time-resolved Raman spectroscopy | Protein, DNA |
Nd-YAG: neodymium-doped yttrium aluminium garnet; Ti: Titanium; He-Ne: Helium-neon; He-Cd: Helium cadmium; Ar: Argon; FT: Fourier transform; UV: Ultraviolet; DNA: Deoxyribonucleic acid.
Figure 3.Simplified diagram of an additive double monochromator.
Micro-spectrometers with nanometer spectral resolution.
| 450–750 nm | Double Planar, 1000 g/mm | −1 | 3 × 3 × 11 mm3 | 3 nm | 9% | [ |
| 420–770 nm | Planar, 1.6 μm | 1 | 0.5 cm3 | 0.7 nm | 0.22 | [ |
| 600–700 nm | Planar, 2 μm | 1 | 11 × 1.5×3 mm3 | 6 nm | 0.05rad | [ |
| 400–1030 nm | Concave, 3.2–4 μm | Multi-order | 11 × 6 × 5 mm3 | 2.5 nm | 0.2 | [ |
| 580–730 nm | Concave, 4 μm | 0.9 nm | 0.11 | [ | ||
| 1475–1625 nm | Concave, 3 μm | 3 | 1.1 nm | 0.21 | [ | |
| 512–768 nm | Concave, 6 μm | 2 | 30 × 30 × 2 mm3 | 2.8 nm | [ |
Figure 4.Simplified block diagram of the FT-Raman spectrometer.
Figure 5.Basic structure of a charge coupled device (CCD).
Figure 6.Quantum efficiency with different wavelength: (a) Si; (b) Ge. (Xn: distance from surface to depletion region; W: depletion region width).
Figure 7.Cross section of a CMOS single photon avalanche diode (SPAD).
Surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) in water contaminant application.
| B. subtilis | 750,50 mW, CCD 1 min | AgFON: 600 nm diameter | 2.1 × 10−14 | [ |
| Chromate | 785, 80.2 mW, CCD TE Cooled 20 s | Au/mercaptoethyl pyridinium | 5 × 10−7 | [ |
| 514.5, 100 mW, CCD 1–2 min | Ag nanoparticle suspension | ∼103 cfu/mL | [ | |
| Uranium | 785, 60 mW | Au/aminomethyl phosphonic acid 50–60 nm | 8 × 10−7 | [ |
| RDX in water | 785 nm, 1 mW, CCD 10 s | Au nanoparticles 90–100 nm | 1 × 10−6 | [ |
| Mercaptobenzoic Acid | 785 nm, 5 mW, 2 s | Ag nanostructure on polyaniline membrane | 1 × 10−12 | [ |
| Crystal violet | 785 nm, 2 mW, CCD 10 s | Fractal-like Au nanostructure 30–50 nm | 4.3 × 10−9 | [ |
| Thrombin | 632.8 nm, 0.5 mW | Au nanoparticles 56 nm | 2 × 10−11 | [ |
| Arsenic | 532 nm, 20 mW | Ag, Cu nanoparticles coated with poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) | 1.3 × 10−8 | [ |
| Cyanide | 514 nm, 20 mW, CCD 30 s | Ag colloids 35–40 nm | 1.5–2 × 10−8 | [ |
| Malachite green | 514 nm, 20 mW, CCD 30 s | Hydroxylamine hydrochloride- reduced Ag colloid 40 nm | 2.6–5.2 × 10−9 | [ |
| Cyanide | 532 nm, 10 mW, CCD 100 s | Ag nanoparticles immobilized on oxidized silicon substrates | 2.7 ×10−7 | [ |
| Perchlorate | 785 nm, 1.5 mW, CCD 10 s | Ag nanoparticles on functionalized silica sol-gel films | 1 × 10−6 | [ |
| Polychlorinated biphenyls | 532 nm, 3.09 mW, 30 s | AgFON | 5 × 10−11 | [ |
| Perchlorate | 785 nm, 1.5 mW, CCD 10 s | Cystamine-modified Au nanoparticles | 5 × 10−16 | [ |
| Uranyl Ion | 632.8 nm, 2 mW, CCD 1 s | Ag modified polypropylene filter (PPF) substrates | 4 × 10−8 | [ |
FON: Film over nanosphere. LOD: Low limit of detection
Figure 8.(a) Temporal variation of excitation, Raman scattering and fluorescence emission; (b) Time-gated operation of detector.
Recently developed time-gated Raman systems.
| Rhodamine 6 G | 532 nm, 6.4 kHz, 900 ps | 3 μJ/pulse | PMT | 700 ps | [ |
| Explosives | 532 nm, 50 ps | 15 mJ | ICCD | 500 ps | [ |
| PMMA | 398 nm, 76 MHz, 3 ps | ICCD | 250 ps | [ | |
| Explosives | 532 nm, 10 kHz, 5 ns | 140 mJ/pulse | ICCD | 1 us | [ |
| Pyrene/toluene Phenylacetone monooxygenase | 257 nm, 76 MHz, 3 ps 405 nm, 76 MHz, 3 ps | 2 mW 10 mW | ICCD | 300 ps | [ |
| Willemite | 532 nm, 40 kHz, 500 ps | 1 μJ/pulse | SPAD | 33 ns | [ |
| Olive oil | 532 nm, 100 kHz | 40 W | SPAD | 300 ps | [ |
Commercially developed portable Raman spectrometers.
| Thermal Scientific TruScan RM | 250 mW @785 nm | 8–10.5 cm−1 | 250–2875 | >12 ms >4 h | 0.90 kg 20.8 × 10.7 × 4.3 |
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| SciAps Inspector-300 | 300 mW @785 nm | 6–8 cm−1 | 175–2875 | X 4 h | 1.70 kg 19.1 × 17.5 × 4.3 |
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| SciAps Inspector-500 | 300 mW @1030 nm | 8–10 cm−1 | 100–2500 | X 4 h | 1.70 kg 19.1 × 17.5 × 4.3 |
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| SnRI CBEx™ 1064 | 300–400 mW @1064 nm | X | 400–2300 | X 4 h | 11.4 × 7.9 × 5.7 |
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| Rigaku FirstGuard | 10–60 mW @532 nm | 10–15 cm−1 | 200–3000 | 20 ms–30 s 3 h | 2.30 kg 12.2 × 31.1 × 31.4 |
| 30–490 mW @785 nm | 7–10 cm−1 | 200–2000 | 20 ms–30 s 3 h | ||
| 30–490 mW @1064 nm | 15–18 cm−1 | 200–2000 | 20 ms–10 s 3 h | ||
| Wasatch Photonics NOVA | 100 mW @785 nm | 12.8 cm−1 | 200–2500 | <1 s >5 h | 0.82 kg 18.3 × 13.3 × 3.7 |
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| BWTEK NanoRAM | 300 mW @785 nm | 9 cm−1 @912 nm | 176–2900 | X >4 h | 1.2 kg 22 × 10 × 5 |