In
the colloidal synthesis of inorganic perovskite materials, cesium
oleate (CsOL) is the most commonly used Cs precursor. Yet, despite
its ubiquitous use in literature, CsOL has been observed to be insoluble
at room temperature and leads to surprisingly inconsistent results
in CsPbX3 nanocrystal synthesis, depending on the Cs salt
from which the precursor is derived. We show that under the conditions
used in most reports, the amount of oleic acid (OA) added, while stoichiometrically
sufficient, still leads to incomplete conversion of the Cs salts to
CsOL. This results in a mixture of Cs sources being present during
the reaction, causing decreased homogeneity and reproducibility. When
a 1:5 Cs:OA ratio is used, complete conversion is readily obtained,
even under mild conditions, resulting in a precursor solution that
is soluble at room temperature and yields identical synthetic results,
regardless of the initial Cs source. Furthermore, 1H nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) of solutions prepared using varying Cs:OA
ratios shows that the maximum ratio of Cs:OA obtainable in solution
is 1:5, with any excess Cs present in the precipitate. We believe
the use of a soluble, fully converted CsOL reagent will improve reproducibility
for Cs-based perovskite synthesis and directly benefit synthetic methods
based on microfluidics.
Applications, advantages, and limitations of the traditional external standard calibration, matrix-matched calibration, internal standardization, and standard additions, as well as the non-traditional interference standard method, standard dilution analysis, multi-isotope calibration, and multispecies calibration methods are discussed.
Few schools and child care facilities
test for Pb in their drinking
water. Reviewing the United States Environmental Protection Agency
Lead and Copper rule data can contribute to guiding future legislation
on Pb testing. This work aims to (i) identify variations in Pb levels
in North Carolina school and child care drinking water by building
age, (ii) evaluate the effect of corrosion control measures on reducing
these levels, and (iii) evaluate the adequacy of Pb reporting limits
according to modern instrumentation. To achieve these objectives,
information on 26,608 water samples collected in 206 North Carolina
child centers between 1991 and 2019 has been analyzed. Lead concentrations
were above a recently proposed 5 μg/L trigger level in 12.3%,
10.4%, 7.5%, and 0.9% of samples from pre-1987, 1987–1990,
1991–2013, and post-2013 buildings, respectively. Thus, recently
proposed legislation requiring testing only for pre-1987 (or pre-1991)
buildings will fail to identify all centers at risk. The odds that
a greater than 5 μg/L Pb level is detected has been decreasing
over the years, with a faster decreasing rate for buildings reporting
corrosion control. Over 15% of samples report a method detection limit
of 5 μg/L. For accurate results, future legislation should require
sub-μg/L detection limits, which are easily achievable with
commonly available instrumentation.
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