scholarly journals Influence of Water Molecules on the Detection of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) Cancer Biomarkers by Nanocomposite Quantum Resistive Vapor Sensors vQRS

Chemosensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 64
Author(s):  
Abhishek Sachan ◽  
Mickaël Castro ◽  
Veena Choudhary ◽  
Jean-Francois Feller

The anticipated diagnosis of various fatal diseases from the analysis of volatile organic compounds (VOC) biomarkers of the volatolome is the object of very dynamic research. Nanocomposite-based quantum resistive vapor sensors (vQRS) exhibit strong advantages in the detection of biomarkers, as they can operate at room temperature with low consumption and sub ppm (part per million) sensitivity. However, to meet this application they need to detect some ppm or less amounts of biomarkers in patients' breath, skin, or urine in complex blends of numerous VOC, most of the time hindered by a huge amount of water molecules. Therefore, it is crucial to analyze the effects of moisture on the chemo-resistive sensing behavior of carbon nanotubes based vQRS. We show that in the presence of water molecules, the sensors cannot detect the right amount of VOC molecules present in their environment. These perturbations of the detection mechanism are found to depend on the chemical interactions between water and other VOC molecules, but also on their competitive absorption on sensors receptive sites, located at the nanojunctions of the conductive architecture. This complex phenomenon studied with down to 12.5 ppm of acetone, ethanol, butanone, toluene, and cyclohexane mixed with 100 ppm of water was worth to investigate in the prospect of future developments of devices analysing real breath samples in which water can reach a concentration of 6%.

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Fei-Yang Tian ◽  
Rui-Xue Cheng ◽  
Yun-Qian Zhang ◽  
Zhu Tao ◽  
Qian-Jiang Zhu

In this work, we reported a porous supramolecular framework (A) constructed of a symmetric tetramethylcucurbit[6]uril (TMeQ[6]) in aqueous HCl solutions; the driving force was the outer surface interaction of cucurbit[n]urils, as well as hydrogen bonding between latticed water molecules and portal carbonyl oxygens of TMeQ[6]. Adsorption experimental results revealed that the porous supramolecular framework can absorb certain fluorophore guests (FGs) to form luminescent assemblies (FG@As) by fluorescence enhancement or colour change, and some of them can respond to certain volatile organic compounds. Thus, the TMeQ[6]-based supramolecular framework could be used as a sensor for certain gas or volatile compounds.


Author(s):  
Khemnath Patir

Different metal ions and anions are crucial for the life of organisms, but their excessive intake or deficiency cause various physiological abnormalities or diseases. Toxic metal ions such as Hg2+, Cr6+, Cd2+, explosive nitroaromatic compounds, and volatile organic compounds are widely used in agriculture, rocket fuels, and industry, but they cause severe effects on human health and environmental change. Hence, sensing and identification of these analytes are important for life, health, and environment protection. Recently, metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have been extensively explored as luminescent sensors due to their unique crystallinity, structural diversity, tunable porosity, and functional groups. This chapter reviewed the origin of luminescent of MOFs and its applications as luminescent sensors for detecting different environmentally toxic analytes such as metal ions, anions, nitroexplosives, and volatile organic compounds. In addition, the detection mechanism of MOFs and its structural dependent properties are also illustrated.


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