4.8 Article

Response of Quartz Crystal Microbalance to Liquid Electrical Properties

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 95, Issue 5, Pages 3075-3081

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c052393075Anal

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The QCM can detect both the mechanical and electrical properties of liquid, including density, viscosity, dielectric constant, and conductivity. Previous research has mainly focused on the conductive property using relative values, which is insufficient to fully reflect the QCM response to liquid electrical properties. In this study, the effect of electrical field scattering on the QCM response to liquid electrical properties was investigated, along with the coupling between mechanical, dielectric, and conductive properties. The results showed that electrical field scattering significantly affects the QCM sensitivity to the dielectric property of liquid, and there is a coupling between dielectric and conductive properties at low conductivity.
Quartz crystal microbalance (QCM) operating in liquid can detect not only liquid mechanical properties (liquid density and viscosity) but also liquid electrical properties (liquid dielectric constant and conductivity). However, the relevant research so far has mainly focused on the liquid conductive property and mostly used relative values, which cannot fully reflect the response of QCM to liquid electrical properties. To study the effect of the electrical field scattering on the QCM response to liquid electrical properties and whether there is a coupling between the mechanical, dielectric, and conductive properties, reference groups for excluding the liquid mechanical effect were set up; solutions (isopropanol/water) with different dielectric constants and conductivities were adopted; static capacitance of the QCM covered with the isopropanol/water solutions was measured. The results indicate that the electrical field scattering plays an important role in the sensitivity of QCM to the dielectric property of liquid. There may be no, or very little, coupling between mechanical and electrical properties, but there is a coupling between dielectric and conductive properties at low conductivity, while at high conductivity, the conductive property is the dominant factor. The results are meaningful for understanding the multi-property sensing of QCM in the liquid phase.

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