Submillisecond response times of oxygen-quenched luminescent coatings
- 1 December 1993
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Review of Scientific Instruments
- Vol. 64 (12) , 3394-3402
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1144310
Abstract
An apparatus and data analysis methodology is described which allows determination of response time to oxygen concentration changes of luminescent oxygen sensor coatings. Utilizing a solenoid valve, a sample chamber creates a pressure jump from 0.1 to 700 Torr in 600 μs that is followed by 15 ms of ringing. An optical detection system measures the response of porphyrin‐based luminescent oxygen sensors to the pressure jump. The pressure in the chamber is measured simultaneously and independently with a piezoresistive pressure transducer. Data analysis techniques using nonlinear least‐squares and numerical convolution of the luminescent response to the pressure rise allow determination of response times of the oxygen sensor. The response to pressure jumps of several luminescent oxygen sensitive coatings designed for video luminescent barometry are measured with this computer‐controlled instrument. Several coatings were studied with response times of ∼2.5 s, ∼400 ms, 11 ms, 1.5 ms, and <25 μs. Studies of the system suggest that we can determine response times down to about 10 μs.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fast oxygen sensors based on sputtered strontium titanateSensors and Actuators B: Chemical, 1991
- Luminescent barometry in wind tunnelsReview of Scientific Instruments, 1990
- Oxygen optrode for use in a fiber-optic glucose biosensorAnalytical Chemistry, 1990
- A new high-pressure cell for differential pressure-jump experiments using optical detectionReview of Scientific Instruments, 1989
- New technique of surface flow visualization based on oxygen quenching of fluorescenceReview of Scientific Instruments, 1980