Public Lab Wiki documentation



Potentiostat

This is a revision from September 05, 2013 19:42. View all revisions
7 | 31 | | #7466

adder_potentiostat.png

potentiostat_cell.png

Ref.: Bard, Allen J., and Faulkner, Larry R. Chap. 15: Electrochemical Instrumentation. Electrochemical Methods: Fundamentals and Applications, 2nd ed. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2001. pp. 632-658

Background

Potentiostats are commonly used to test for the presence (via electrical activity) of particular compounds and microbes in solution, and thus have applications in environmental monitoring, food and drug testing, and many other areas. Typically, potentiostats are used in a research or industrial laboratory context for these purposes, and most commercially-available potentiostats are very expensive ($1000 is on the “cheap” side). There have been several initiatives in the last decade that have focused on designing cheaper alternatives; and when investigating technologies related to water quality assessment. Our aim here is to build on these efforts, and leverage the experise of the open hardware community in order to build a very accessible, and capable, device. Possible applications include:

  • Tracking heavy metal concentrations in waterways. Various industrial processes used in the US and abroad can lead to the contamination of water with heavy metals that are dangerous to humans, like mercury and arsenic. An inexpensive, battery-powered potentiostat -- communicating over the cellular network, perhaps, or merely recording locally to an SD card -- might be able to track relative fluctuations in the concentrations of these metals, making monitoring these contaminants easier.

  • A low-cost ‘field lab’ for evaluating water samples. An inexpensive potentiostat, when used according to the proper protocols, might be used to indicate absolute concentrations of heavy metals in water. This could allow citizens and organizations who can’t afford to send water samples to an expensive, bonded laboratory to do their own testing -- particularly relevant in a developing-world context.

  • Education. Electrochemistry is an important part of many high school, college, and graduate chemistry curricula; an inexpensive potentiostat could render these curricula more accessible to educational institutions that don’t have the budget for the more expensive commercial versions.

  • Research. Making an easily-hackable, programmable, and extensible potentiostat platform, based on a widely-used and well-supported technologies like the Arduino and the Raspberry Pi, could allow for novel electrochemistry applications in the laboratory; when a device that once cost $2000 and didn’t “play nice” with other hardware and software suddenly becomes available for under $200, and can be integrated with easy-to-use, open source software and hardware, researchers will likely dream up new approaches to open research problems -- and higher-throughput approaches in already-established research areas.

References

CheapStat -Cornell U Potentiostat -Potentiostat Software on Github

  • Nice wikipedia description of what a potentiostat is here.

  • A basic description of potentiostat architectures can be found at http://www.consultrsr.com/resources/pstats/design.htm

  • CheapStat -- PLOSOne article here -- they use a DIY design to assess ascorbic acid in orange juice, cyanide in water, acetaminophen content of over-the-counter pain medication, and arsenic in water. Neat!

  • An open potentiostat at Cornell is here

Uses

  • Assess arsenic, cyanide, other contaminants / toxins in water
  • Educational
  • Identifying toxins / ingredients in foodstuffs

Development

  • olm-pstat - repository for the PLOTS/PVOS Open Lab Monitor potentiostat peripheral
  • source code from Jack Summers' DIY potentiostat

OHS 2013

  • Table - should have power
  • Device - need to try chem experiment. Craig
  • Experiment materials. Craig. Two sets of cables, to avoid contamination.
  • Code - realtime plot in Python. Craig
  • Serial library patch
  • Applications: describe what this can do. Don
  • Feedback/sign up form. Ian
  • Cards with logo. In a week. Jake will order.
  • Schematic. Craig or Don make SVG diagram. High level and lower level of feedback loop
  • Data sample image - python output, Craig
  • Reference list:
  • electro-chemistry textbook
  • Jack
  • PVOS GitHub repo
  • various current publications on potentiostats
  • Instructions on setup - Ian will contact Kipp. Do we get free passes as demoers, or do we need to order tickets?
  • PVOS logo into Badger form - Ian