An electrochemical sensor, based on thin films or selective membranes as recognition
elements, and an electrochemical half-cell equivalent to other half-cells of the zeroth
(
inert metal in a redox electrolyte), 1st, 2nd and 3rd kinds. These devices are distinct
from systems that involve redox reactions (electrodes of zeroth, 1st, 2nd and 3rd
kinds), although they often contain a 2nd kind electrode as the '
inner' or '
internal'
reference electrode. The potential difference response has, as its principal component, the Gibbs energy
change associated with permselective mass transfer (by ion-exchange,
solvent extraction or some other mechanism) across a phase boundary. The ion-selective electrode must
be used in conjunction with a
reference electrode (i.e. '
outer' or '
external'
reference electrode) to form a complete electrochemical cell. The measured potential differences (ion-selective
electrode vs. outer
reference electrode potentials) are linearly dependent on the logarithm of the activity of a given ion
in solution. Comment: The term '
ion-specific electrode' is not recommended. The term '
specific' implies that the electrode does not respond to additional ions. Since no electrode
is truly specific for one ion, the term '
ion-selective' is recommended as more appropriate. '
Selective ion-sensitive electrode' is a little-used term to describe an ion-selective electrode. '
Principal' or '
primary' ions are those which an electrode is designed to measure. It is never certain that
the '
principal' ion is most sensitively measured, e.g. nitrate ion-selective electrodes.
Source:
PAC, 1994, 66, 2527
(Recommendations for nomenclature of ionselective electrodes (IUPAC Recommendations
1994))
on page 2531