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Sensor Fusion: Comprehensive Real-Time, On-Line Monitoring for Process Control via Visible, Near-Infrared, and Raman Spectroscopy
Author(s) -
Amanda M. Lines,
Gabriel B. Hall,
Susan Asmussen,
Jarrod Allred,
Sergey I. Sinkov,
Forrest D. Heller,
Neal B. Gallagher,
Gregg J. Lumetta,
Samuel A. Bryan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs sensors
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.055
H-Index - 57
ISSN - 2379-3694
DOI - 10.1021/acssensors.0c00659
Subject(s) - absorbance , raman spectroscopy , analyte , spectroscopy , chemistry , nitric acid , analytical chemistry (journal) , infrared , infrared spectroscopy , process control , process (computing) , materials science , computer science , inorganic chemistry , optics , environmental chemistry , chromatography , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , operating system
On-line monitoring based on optical spectroscopy provides unprecedented insight into the chemical composition of process streams or batches. Amplifying this approach through utilizing multiple forms of optical spectroscopy in sensor fusion can greatly expand the number and type of chemical species that can be identified and quantified. This is demonstrated herein, on the analysis of used nuclear fuel recycling streams: highly complex processes with multiple target and interfering analytes. The optical techniques of visible absorbance, near-infrared absorbance, and Raman spectroscopy were combined to quantify plutonium(III, IV, VI), uranium(IV, VI), neptunium(IV, V, VI), and nitric acid. Chemometric modeling was used to quantify analytes in process streams in real time, and results were successfully used to enable immediate process control and generation of a product stream at a set composition ratio. This represents a significant step forward in the ability to monitor and control complex chemical processes occurring in harsh chemical environments.

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