Paper
10 December 1996 Anion selective optodes: development of a fluorescent fiber optic sensor for the determination of nitrite activity
Susan L. R. Barker, Michael R. Shortreed, Raoul Kopelman
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Abstract
The response of state of the art anion optodes often cannot be described in a thermodynamically exact manner because the ionic strength within the membrane phase of such optodes changes during the course of a titration. Incorporating lipophilic charge sites in the anion optode membranes provides a constant ionic strength in the membrane phase, the ability to measure anion activities, and a more thermodynamically describable system. This configuration has been used to create a micrometer-sized nitrite-selective optode. Recent elucidation of the many biological roles of nitric oxide (NO) has spurred interest in sensitive and selective detection of this molecule. In biological systems NO is converted to NO2- within 30 sec and the biological concentration of NO2- is normally on the micromolar level. The optode we have prepared contains a selective vitamin B12 derivative ionophore, a fluorescent chromoionophore (ETH 2439 or ETH 5350), and lipophilic charge sites. These components are entrapped in a highly plasticized PVC matrix which is placed on the distal end of the fiber. Sensor characteristics such as limit of detection and reversibility are presented.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Susan L. R. Barker, Michael R. Shortreed, and Raoul Kopelman "Anion selective optodes: development of a fluorescent fiber optic sensor for the determination of nitrite activity", Proc. SPIE 2836, Chemical, Biochemical, and Environmental Fiber Sensors VIII, (10 December 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.260605
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Magnesium

Fiber optics sensors

Ions

Luminescence

Electrodes

NOx

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