| Literature DB >> 28240312 |
Tatiana P Vello1,2, Rafael F de Oliveira1, Gustavo O Silva1, Davi H S de Camargo1, Carlos C B Bufon1,2,3.
Abstract
Ethanol is a biofuel used worldwide. However, the presence of excessive water either during the distillation process or by fraudulent adulteration is a major concern in the use of ethanol fuel. High water levels may cause engine malfunction, in addition to being considered illegal. Here, we describe the development of a simple, fast and accurate platform based on nanostructured sensors to evaluate ethanol samples. The device fabrication is facile, based on standard microfabrication and thin-film deposition methods. The sensor operation relies on capacitance measurements employing a parallel plate capacitor containing a conformational aluminum oxide (Al2O3) thin layer (15 nm). The sensor operates over the full range water concentration, i.e., from approximately 0% to 100% vol. of water in ethanol, with water traces being detectable down to 0.5% vol. These characteristics make the proposed device unique with respect to other platforms. Finally, the good agreement between the sensor response and analyses performed by gas chromatography of ethanol biofuel endorses the accuracy of the proposed method. Due to the full operation range, the reported sensor has the technological potential for use as a point-of-care analytical tool at gas stations or in the chemical, pharmaceutical, and beverage industries, to mention a few.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28240312 PMCID: PMC5327469 DOI: 10.1038/srep43432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Electrical characterization of the device in ethanol.
(a) Device capacitance (at 20 Hz) as a function of the water/EtOH concentration for different oxide thicknesses. (b) Capacitance as a function of frequency for different EtOH/water concentrations using a 15 nm-thick Al2O3-coated electrode. (c) The device equivalent circuit. The indexes ox, dl and sol correspond, respectively, to the capacitive and resistive contributions of the oxide, the electrical double layer and the solution bulk to measured impedance.
Figure 2Sensor response for different ethanol/water mixtures.
(a) Cp as a function of the EtOH content (from 0% to 100% vol.). The device response can be sectored in three regions: region I for %EtOH from 0% to 20% vol., region II from 20% to 90% vol. and region III for EtOH concentrations higher than 90% vol. Calibration curves for the device response in the respective regions (b–d). The error bars correspond to the standard deviation values obtained using six similar devices.
Comparison of responses between the proposed device and GC analyses.
| Sample | Ethanol content (% vol.) | Deviation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sensor response | GC response | ||
| HEF#1 | 94.6 (±0.5) | 95.6 (±0.1) | 1% |
| HEF#2 | 94.1 (±0.4) | 96.4 (±0.1) | 2.4% |
| HEF#3 | 94.4 (±0.5) | 96.1 (±0.1) | 1.8% |
| adulterated HEF#1 | 93.1 (±0.3) | 94.1 (±0.1) | 1.1% |
| adulterated HEF#2 | 83.5 (±0.8) | 85.8 (±0.1) | 2.7% |
Figure 3Device layout and equivalent circuit model.
(a) Picture of the sensing device showing the two capacitor plates, (b) the sketch of the capacitor configuration for the evaluation of ethanol samples (not to scale).