An electrical solid-state sulphur dioxide vapour sensor based on a polyvinyl alcohol formaldehyde composite†
Abstract
Polyvinyl alcohol formaldehyde (PVF)-based composites are synthesized and applied for rapid detection and quantification of sulphur dioxide (SO2) vapours by electrical impedance measurements. A series of polymeric composites, namely PVF/single-walled carbon nanotubes (PVFCNTs), PVF/carbon nanoparticles (PVFCNPs), PVF–coumarin-6 (PVFCOU), PVF/thiophene (PVFTH) and PVF/cytochrome-6-oxidase (PVFCY), are synthesized in high yields by a simple one-pot approach. These were characterized by FT-IR, AC conductivity and FESEM. The composites were then used for the impedimetric detection of SO2 vapours, and the sensitivity was found to follow the order: PVFCOU > PVFTH > PVF. The current vs. voltage (I–V) curves further demonstrated a second-order decrease in conduction for PVFCOU upon exposure to SO2 vapours. Amongst the synthesized composites, PVFCOU exhibited an excellent response time of 3 s for 400 ppt SO2, with a limit of detection of 1.15 ppb. Our findings demonstrate, for the first time, an AC electrical impedance-based SO2 detection, using the PVFCOU polymeric composite. In addition, this polymeric composite fulfills the dual function of highly efficient sensing and analyte sequestration. Thus, PVFCOU may be an ideal cost-effective solid-state sensor material for onsite vapour sensing applications.