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Spectroelectrochemical Sensing Based on Multimode Selectivity Simultaneously Achievable in a Single Device. : 10. Sensing of Ferrocyanide in Hanford Tank Waste Simulant Solution

✍ Scribed by Mila Maizels; Carl J. Seliskar; William R. Heineman; Samuel A. Bryan


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
110 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
1040-0397

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✦ Synopsis


A ferrocyanide spectroelectrochemical sensor has been evaluated on Hanford tank waste simulant solution. The sensor consists of an indium tin oxide optically transparent electrode coated with a thin film of porous silica containing immobilized PDMDAAC as an anion exchanger. Ferrocyanide is quantified by the absorbance change at 420 nm that accompanies electrochemical modulation of ferrocyanide that partitions into the film. Hanford tank waste simulant mimics the contents of tanks in which radioactive waste is stored. A solution of the simulant is a complex mixture of high pH (10) and high ionic strength that contains ferrocyanide. Systematic evaluation of the species in the simulant solution showed the only significant interference to be competition by the anions in the simulant with the preconcentration of ferrocyanide into the sensing film. Deterioration of the sensing film by the high ionic strength and alkaline conditions restricted its useful lifetime to about 40 min. Analysis of simulant with a sensor calibrated at high ionic strength gave 8.0 mM ferrocyanide compared to 8.2 mM obtained by FTIR.


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Spectroelectrochemical Sensing Based on
✍ Mila Maizels; Carl J. Seliskar; William R. Heineman 📂 Article 📅 2000 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 179 KB 👁 2 views

A spectroelectrochemical sensor that has trimodal selectivity (selective partitioning, electrochemistry, and spectroscopy) is evaluated for the determination of ferrocyanide in solution. The sensor is based on attenuated total re¯ection spectroscopy at an indium-tin oxide optically transparent elect