Electrodes for pH Sensing Based on Stainless Steel: Mechanism, Surface Modification, Potentiometric Performance, and Prospects
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Vilasó Cadre, Javier Ernesto; Hidalgo, Juan; Arada-Pérez, María A.; Reyes-Domínguez, Iván A.; Turdean, Graziella L.; Cruz, Roel; Piña Leyte Vidal, Juan Jesús; González Fernández, Lázaro Adrián; Sánchez-Polo, Manuel; Hidalgo Viteri, Luis CarlosEditorial
MDPI
Materia
pH Sensor Stainless steel Metal oxide Analytical device
Fecha
2025-05-01Referencia bibliográfica
Vilasó-Cadre, J.E.; Hidalgo, J.; Arada-Pérez, M.A.; ReyesDomínguez, I.A.; Turdean, G.L.; Cruz, R.; Piña Leyte-Vidal, J.J.; GonzálezFernández, L.A.; Sánchez-Polo, M.; Hidalgo, L. Electrodes for pH Sensing Based on Stainless Steel: Mechanism, Surface Modification, Potentiometric Performance, and Prospects. Chemosensors 2025, 13, 160. [DOI: 10.3390/chemosensors13050160]
Resumen
The fabrication of miniaturized and durable pH electrodes is a key requirement for developing advanced analytical devices for both industrial and biomedical applications. Glass electrodes are not an option in these cases. Electrodes based on metal oxides have been the most studied for pH sensing in these and other applications. Stainless steel pH electrodes have been an option for many years, both for measurement using steel as a sensitive material and using it as a substrate for the deposition of other metal oxides; in the latter case, the sensitive ability of stainless steel seems to play a crucial role. In addition, recent use as a substrate for materials such as polymers, carbon nanotubes, and metallic nanoparticles should be considered. This paper presents a review of this type of pH electrode, covering aspects related to the sensing mechanism, the treatment of stainless steel, potentiometric performances, applications, and the prospects of these sensors for use in modern analytical instruments. Sensing with the oxide passive layer and the artificial layer by oxidation treatments is analyzed. The use of metal oxides and other materials as the sensitive layer on stainless steel, their application in wearable devices, microneedle sensors, and combination with field-effect transistors for high-temperature pH sensing are covered as the most current and promising applications.





