An electrochemical method for monitoring the acidity of water for fuel cell and environmental applications

Maintaining energy and water supplies is still a prime global challenge and hydrogen fuels are set to offer a solution to this challenge, as the combination of hydrogen and oxygen as a fuel stock with the generation of pure water as by‐product is extremely attractive. However, ensuring that the wate...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gao, Xiangming, Dai, Chencheng, Xu, Jason Zhichuan, Lawrence, Nathan S., Fisher, Adrian C.
Other Authors: School of Materials Science & Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139772
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-139772
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1397722020-06-01T10:01:56Z An electrochemical method for monitoring the acidity of water for fuel cell and environmental applications Gao, Xiangming Dai, Chencheng Xu, Jason Zhichuan Lawrence, Nathan S. Fisher, Adrian C. School of Materials Science & Engineering Engineering::Materials Electrochemistry Ferrocene Maintaining energy and water supplies is still a prime global challenge and hydrogen fuels are set to offer a solution to this challenge, as the combination of hydrogen and oxygen as a fuel stock with the generation of pure water as by‐product is extremely attractive. However, ensuring that the water supply is clean and contaminant‐free is key to ensuring that it can be incorporated into the drinking supply. Contaminants from the fuel cell catalysts or breakdown of materials within the fuel cell over its working life will affect the water quality. The measurement of acidity (pH) is an important indicator for understanding water quality. This article reports a calibration‐free, affordable, screen‐printed electrode (SPE) capable of measuring pH within these waters. This device is fabricated by screen printing pH‐insensitive ferrocene, in conjunction with a pH‐active (and redox‐active) alizarin compound. This electrode reveals consistent voltammetric response to both buffered and low‐buffered media with sufficient supporting electrolytes, achieving a working range from pH 2 to 9.5. This approach provides a disposable, reproducible, low‐cost method for pH monitoring in harsh environments, for example in low‐buffered water quality monitoring and the food industry. 2020-05-21T07:38:51Z 2020-05-21T07:38:51Z 2017 Journal Article Gao, X., Dai, C., Xu, J. Z., Lawrence, N. S., & Fisher, A. C. (2018). An electrochemical method for monitoring the acidity of water for fuel cell and environmental applications. Energy Technology, 6(1), 94-99. doi:10.1002/ente.201700617 2194-4288 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139772 10.1002/ente.201700617 2-s2.0-85040309353 1 6 94 99 en Energy Technology © 2018 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Materials
Electrochemistry
Ferrocene
spellingShingle Engineering::Materials
Electrochemistry
Ferrocene
Gao, Xiangming
Dai, Chencheng
Xu, Jason Zhichuan
Lawrence, Nathan S.
Fisher, Adrian C.
An electrochemical method for monitoring the acidity of water for fuel cell and environmental applications
description Maintaining energy and water supplies is still a prime global challenge and hydrogen fuels are set to offer a solution to this challenge, as the combination of hydrogen and oxygen as a fuel stock with the generation of pure water as by‐product is extremely attractive. However, ensuring that the water supply is clean and contaminant‐free is key to ensuring that it can be incorporated into the drinking supply. Contaminants from the fuel cell catalysts or breakdown of materials within the fuel cell over its working life will affect the water quality. The measurement of acidity (pH) is an important indicator for understanding water quality. This article reports a calibration‐free, affordable, screen‐printed electrode (SPE) capable of measuring pH within these waters. This device is fabricated by screen printing pH‐insensitive ferrocene, in conjunction with a pH‐active (and redox‐active) alizarin compound. This electrode reveals consistent voltammetric response to both buffered and low‐buffered media with sufficient supporting electrolytes, achieving a working range from pH 2 to 9.5. This approach provides a disposable, reproducible, low‐cost method for pH monitoring in harsh environments, for example in low‐buffered water quality monitoring and the food industry.
author2 School of Materials Science & Engineering
author_facet School of Materials Science & Engineering
Gao, Xiangming
Dai, Chencheng
Xu, Jason Zhichuan
Lawrence, Nathan S.
Fisher, Adrian C.
format Article
author Gao, Xiangming
Dai, Chencheng
Xu, Jason Zhichuan
Lawrence, Nathan S.
Fisher, Adrian C.
author_sort Gao, Xiangming
title An electrochemical method for monitoring the acidity of water for fuel cell and environmental applications
title_short An electrochemical method for monitoring the acidity of water for fuel cell and environmental applications
title_full An electrochemical method for monitoring the acidity of water for fuel cell and environmental applications
title_fullStr An electrochemical method for monitoring the acidity of water for fuel cell and environmental applications
title_full_unstemmed An electrochemical method for monitoring the acidity of water for fuel cell and environmental applications
title_sort electrochemical method for monitoring the acidity of water for fuel cell and environmental applications
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139772
_version_ 1681059114628677632