Abstract

The fast and non-invasive detection of odors and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) by gas sensors and electronic noses is a growing field of interest, mostly due to a large scope of potential applications. Additional drivers for the expansion of the field include the development of alternative and sustainable sensing materials. The discovery that isolated cross-linked polymeric structures of suberin spontaneously self-assemble as a film inspired us to develop new sensing composite materials consisting of suberin and a liquid crystal (LC). Due to their stimuli-responsive and optically active nature, liquid crystals are interesting probes in gas sensing. Herein, we report the isolation and the chemical characterization of two suberin types (from cork and from potato peels) resorting to analyses of gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS), solution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The collected data highlighted their compositional and structural differences. Cork suberin showed a higher proportion of longer aliphatic constituents and is more esterified than potato suberin. Accordingly, when casted it formed films with larger surface irregularities and a higher C/O ratio. When either type of suberin was combined with the liquid crystal 5CB, the ensuing hybrid materials showed distinctive morphological and sensing properties towards a set of 12 VOCs (comprising heptane, hexane, chloroform, toluene, dichlormethane, diethylether, ethyl acetate, acetonitrile, acetone, ethanol, methanol, and acetic acid). The optical responses generated by the materials are reversible and reproducible, showing stability for 3 weeks. The individual VOC-sensing responses of the two hybrid materials are discussed taking as basis the chemistry of each suberin type. A support vector machines (SVM) algorithm based on the features of the optical responses was implemented to assess the VOC identification ability of the materials, revealing that the two distinct suberin-based sensors complement each other, since they selectively identify distinct VOCs or VOC groups. It is expected that such new environmentally-friendly gas sensing materials derived from natural diversity can be combined in arrays to enlarge selectivity and sensing capacity.

Highlights

  • Artificial olfaction using electronic noses is a growing field of interest due to their capability of probing odors and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in a fast and non-invasive manner

  • The gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) data derived from three different experimental replicas for each suberin type proved to have low variance (Levene's test: pvalue 1⁄4 0.919 and 0.907, for potato suberin and cork suberin, respectively)

  • The most abundant monomers were systematically identified in the two suberin types, the identification yield was higher for cork suberin (63.12%) compared to potato suberin (38.18%) (Table S1)

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Summary

Introduction

Artificial olfaction using electronic noses is a growing field of interest due to their capability of probing odors and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in a fast and non-invasive manner. Alternative sustainable materials for gas sensing are emerging, including recent works using bio-based polymers incorporating liquid crystal probes [6] that operate at room temperature with high reproducibility and selectivity [7,8]. Due to their stimuli-responsive and optically active nature, liquid crystals show great potential as optical probes to detect gaseous analytes such as VOCs [6]

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