Search results for "Cyclodextrin Derivatives"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Optical Sensor for Real-Time Detection of Trichlorofluoromethane

2019

Trichlorofluoromethane was once a promising and versatile applicable chlorofluorocarbon. Unaware of its ozone-depleting character, for a long time it was globally applied as propellant and refrigerant and thus led to significant thinning of the ozone layer and contributed to the formation of the so-called ozone hole. Although production and application of this substance were gradually reduced at an early stage, we still face the consequences of its former careless use. Today, trichlorofluoromethane is released during recycling processes of waste cooling devices, traded on the black market, and according to recent findings still illegally manufactured. Here, we present an optical sensor devi…

Materials scienceTrichlorofluoromethane02 engineering and technologylcsh:Chemical technology01 natural sciencesBiochemistryArticlesupramolecular chemistryAnalytical Chemistry010309 opticsRefrigerantchemistry.chemical_compoundPlanarFiber Bragg gratingsensor0103 physical sciencesOzone layerlcsh:TP1-1185Electrical and Electronic EngineeringInstrumentationPropellantbusiness.industry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCyclodextrin DerivativesAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsChemical sensortrichloroflouromethanecyclodextrinchemistryBragg gratingOptoelectronics0210 nano-technologybusinessSensors
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Poly(2-vinylpyridine)-Based Polymers as an Efficient Affinity Material for the Detection of Airborne Phenol

2015

Phenol is an omnipresent compound in various situations. Its acute toxicity makes alternative tracing methods desirable. Highly potent affinity materials based on polyvinyl pyridine allow an efficient tracing of this particular airborne compound. Their performance over, for example, benzene is tremendously superior. In combination with a simple cyclodextrin derivative an array allows differentiation among such aromatic competitors. Owing to the high affinity of these polymers for phenol, quartz microbalance-based tracing is able to detect phenol below the parts per million range. This was previously not possible with other affinity materials.

chemistry.chemical_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundMolecular recognition2-VinylpyridinechemistryPyridineOrganic chemistryPhenolGeneral ChemistryPolymerTracingBenzeneCyclodextrin DerivativesChemPlusChem
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