Abstract

Rapid, inexpensive, and precise water salinity testing remains indispensable in water quality monitoring applications. Despite many sensors and commercialized devices to monitor seawater salinity, salt detection and quantification at very low levels of drinking water (below 120 ppm) have been overlooked. In this paper, we report on optimization of a low-cost microfluidic sensor to measure water salinity in the range of 1–120 ppm. The proposed design employs two copper microbridge wires suspended orthogonally in a PDMS microchannel to measure salinity based on the electrical resistance between the wires. The preliminary design of the sensor microchannel with a rectangular cross-section width (w) of 900 μm and height (h) of 500 μm could measure the water salinity in the range of 1–20 ppm in less than 1 min with detection sensitivity, limit of detection (LOD), and limit of quantification (LOQ) of 17.1 ohm/ohm·cm, 0.31 ppm, and 0.37 ppm, respectively. Data from the preliminary design was used for developing and validating a numerical model which was subsequently used for parametric studies and optimization to improve the sensor’s performance. The optimized design demonstrated an order of magnitude increase in sensitivity (385 ohm/ohm·cm), a 6-fold wider detection range (1–120 ppm), and a 15-fold enhancement in miniaturization of the microfluidic channel (w = 200 μm and h = 150 μm) with LOD and LOQ of 0.39 and 0.44 ppm, respectively. In the future, the sensor can be integrated into a hand-held device to remove present impediments for low-cost and ubiquitous salinity surveillance of drinking water.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call