Naked-Eye Discrimination of Methanol from Ethanol
Using Composite Film of Oxoporphyrinogen and Layered Double Hydroxide
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Abstract
Methanol
is a highly toxic substance, but it is unfortunately very difficult
to differentiate from other alcohols (especially ethanol) without
performing chemical analyses. Here we report that a composite film
prepared from oxoporphyrinogen (OxP) and a layered double hydroxide
(LDH) undergoes a visible color change (from magenta to purple) when
exposed to methanol, a change that does not occur upon exposure to
ethanol. Interestingly, methanol-induced color variation of the OxP-LDH
composite film is retained even after removal of methanol under reduced
pressure, a condition that does not occur in the case of conventional
solvatochromic dyes. The original state of the OxP-LDH composite film
could be recovered by rinsing it with tetrahydrofuran (THF), enabling
repeated usage of the composite film. The mechanism of color variation,
based on solid-state <sup>13</sup>C–CP/MAS NMR and solution-state <sup>13</sup>C NMR studies, is proposed to be anion transfer from LDH
to OxP triggered by methanol exposure