Sensors (Apr 2015)

Corroles-Porphyrins: A Teamwork for Gas Sensor Arrays

  • Rosamaria Capuano,
  • Giuseppe Pomarico,
  • Roberto Paolesse,
  • Corrado Di Natale

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s150408121
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 4
pp. 8121 – 8130

Abstract

Read online

Porphyrins provide an excellent material for chemical sensors, and they have been used for sensing species both in air and solution. In the gas phase, the broad selectivity of porphyrins is largely dependant on molecular features, such as the metal ion complexed at the core of the aromatic ring and the peripheral substituents. Although these features have been largely exploited to design gas sensor arrays, so far, little attention has been devoted to modify the sensing properties of these macrocycles by variation of the molecular aromatic ring. In this paper, the gas sensing properties of a porphyrin analog, the corrole, are studied in comparison with those of the parent porphyrin. Results show that changes in the aromatic ring have important consequences on the sensitivity and selectivity of the sensors and that porphyrins and corroles can positively cooperate to enhance the performance of sensor arrays.

Keywords