RESUMO
Photoelectrochemical (PEC) sensors show great potential for the detection of heavy metal ions because of their low background noise, high sensitivity, and ease of integration. However, the detection limit is relatively high for hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) monitoring in addition to the requirement of an external bias. Herein, a CuO film is readily synthesized as the photoactive material via reactive sputtering and thermal annealing in the construction of a PEC sensing photocathode for Cr(VI) monitoring. A different mechanism (i.e., Signal-Weakening PEC sensing) is confirmed by examining the electrochemical impedance and photocurrent response of different CuO film photoelectrodes prepared with the same conditions in contact with various solutions containing concentration-varying Cr(VI) for different durations. The detection of Cr(VI) is successfully achieved with the Signal-Weakening PEC response; a drop of photocathode signal with an increasing Cr(VI) concentration from the steric hindrance effect of the in situ formed Cr(OH)3 precipitates. The photocurrent of the optimized CuO film photocathode linearly declines as the concentration of Cr(VI) increases from 0.08 to 20 µM, with a detection limit down to 2.8 nM (Signal/Noise = 3) and a fitted sensitivity of 4.22 µA·µM-1. Moreover, this proposed sensing route shows operation simplicity, satisfactory selectivity, and reproducibility.
RESUMO
The processes of planetary accretion or formation of the Earth and other celestial objects can be studied by using the 182Hf-182W chronometer which requires precise measurements of tungsten isotope ratios. Many comparative measurements for the isotopic composition of tungsten have been performed using either thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS) or multi-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (MC-ICP-MS). Yet, calibrated measurements of tungsten isotope ratios, and, in turn, isotopic abundances and atomic weight, are still lacking. In this study, we report the first independent measurements of all tungsten isotope ratios in five commercial tungsten reagents, including the new NRC candidate isotopic reference material WOLF-1 by MC-ICP-MS with use of the-state-of-the-art optimized regression mass bias correction model and NIST SRM 989 isotopic rhenium as calibrator.