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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Using low cost portable devices that enable a single analytical step for screening environmental contaminants
is today a demanding issue. This concept is here tried out by recycling screen-printed electrodes
that were to be disposed of and by choosing as sensory element a low cost material offering specific
response for an environmental contaminant. Microcystins (MCs) were used as target analyte, for being
dangerous toxins produced by cyanobacteria released into water bodies. The sensory element was a
plastic antibody designed by surface imprinting with carefully selected monomers to ensure a specific
response. These were designed on the wall of carbon nanotubes, taking advantage of their exceptional
electrical properties. The stereochemical ability of the sensory material to detect MCs was checked by
preparing blank materials where the imprinting stage was made without the template molecule.
The novel sensory material for MCs was introduced in a polymeric matrix and evaluated against potentiometric
measurements. Nernstian response was observed from 7.24 × 10−10 to 1.28 × 10−9 M in buffer
solution (10 mM HEPES, 150 mM NaCl, pH 6.6), with average slopes of −62 mVdecade−1 and detection
capabilities below 1 nM. The blank materials were unable to provide a linear response against
log(concentration), showing only a slight potential change towards more positive potentials with increasing
concentrations (while that ofthe plastic antibodies moved to more negative values), with a maximum
rate of +33 mVdecade−1. The sensors presented good selectivity towards sulphate, iron and ammonium
ions, and also chloroform and tetrachloroethylene (TCE) and fast response (<20 s). This concept was
successfully tested on the analysis of spiked environmental water samples. The sensors were further
applied onto recycled chips, comprehending one site for the reference electrode and two sites for different
selective membranes, in a biparametric approach for “in situ” analysis.
Description
Keywords
Biosensor Microcystin-LR Carbon nanotubes Potentiometry Nanomaterials
Citation
Publisher
Elsevier