| Literature DB >> 27070614 |
Liuzheng Ma1,2, Ling Wang3, Ruipeng Chen4,5, Keke Chang6, Shun Wang7,8, Xinran Hu9, Xiaohui Sun10, Zhaohui Lu11, Haifeng Sun12, Qingqian Guo13, Min Jiang14, Jiandong Hu15,16.
Abstract
Ethylene as an indicator for evaluating fruit ripening can be measured by very sensitive electrochemical gas sensors based on a high-resolution current produced by a bias potential applied to the electrodes. For this purpose, a measurement system for monitoring ethylene gas concentrations to evaluate fruit ripening by using the electrochemical ethylene sensor was successfully developed. Before the electrochemical ethylene sensor was used to measure the ethylene gas concentrations released from fruits, a calibration curve was established by the standard ethylene gases at concentrations of 2.99 ppm, 4.99 ppm, 8.01 ppm and 10 ppm, respectively, with a flow rate of 0.4 L·min(-1). From the calibration curve, the linear relationship between the responses and concentrations of ethylene gas was obtained in the range of 0-10 ppm with the correlation coefficient R² of 0.9976. The micropump and a novel signal conditioning circuit were implemented in this measurement, resulting in a rapid response in detecting ethylene concentrations down to 0.1 ppm in air and in under 50 s. In this experiment, three kinds of fruits-apples, pears and kiwifruits-were studied at a low concentration (under 0.8 ppm) of trace ethylene content in the air exhaled by fruits. The experimental results showed that a low cost, compact measurement system constructed by using an electrochemical ethylene sensor has a high sensitivity of 0.3907 V·ppm(-1) with a theoretical detection limit of 0.413 ppm, and is non-invasive and highly portable.Entities:
Keywords: electrochemical sensor; ethylene gas; fruit ripening; micropump; non-invasive
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27070614 PMCID: PMC4851015 DOI: 10.3390/s16040501
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the smart electrochemical ethylene sensor.
Figure 2Experimental setup for the ethylene measurement using an electrochemical sensor: schematic diagram and photograph of setup. (A) The measurement apparatus incorporates all of the components (B) The circuit schematic structure of the measurement system for monitoring the ethylene gas in real time.
Figure 3The time-response characteristics of the measurement system.
Figure 4Establishment of the fitting curve for the quantification of the ethylene gas concentrations.
Figure 5Measurements of ethylene gas concentration released from individual fruits including apple, kiwifruit and pear by using the electrochemical sensor for less than 1 min.
Figure 6Response values from the selectivity experiment with nitrogen gas and the regeneration process of this electrochemical ethylene gas sensor.