共 4 条
Multi-Emission Carbon Dots Combining Turn-On Sensing and Fluorescence Quenching Exhibit Ultrahigh Selectivity for Mercury in Real Water Samples
被引:7
|作者:
Zhu, Panpan
[1
]
Hou, Sheng-Li
[1
]
Liu, Zhenhai
[1
]
Zhou, Yinzhu
[2
]
Alvarez, Pedro J. J.
[3
]
Chen, Wei
[1
]
Zhang, Tong
[1
]
机构:
[1] Nankai Univ, Coll Environm Sci & Engn, Tianjin Key Lab Environm Remediat & Pollut Control, Minist Educ,Key Lab Pollut Proc & Environm Criteri, Tianjin 300350, Peoples R China
[2] China Geol Survey, Ctr Hydrogeol & Environm Geol, Tianjin 300304, Peoples R China
[3] Rice Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Houston, TX 77005 USA
基金:
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词:
mercury contamination;
multi-emission carbondots;
selectivity;
aggregation-induced emissionenhancement;
environmental matrices;
ELECTRON-TRANSFER;
SPECIATION;
COMPLEXES;
DESIGN;
D O I:
10.1021/acs.est.4c02355
中图分类号:
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号:
08 ;
0830 ;
摘要:
Mercury is a ubiquitous heavy-metal pollutant and poses serious ecological and human-health risks. There is an ever-growing demand for rapid, sensitive, and selective detection of mercury in natural waters, particularly for regions lacking infrastructure specialized for mercury analysis. Here, we show that a sensor based on multi-emission carbon dots (M-CDs) exhibits ultrahigh sensing selectivity toward Hg(II) in complex environmental matrices, tested in the presence of a range of environmentally relevant metal/metalloid ions as well as natural and artificial ligands, using various real water samples. By incorporating structural features of calcein and folic acid that enable tunable emissions, the M-CDs couple an emission enhancement at 432 nm and a simultaneous reduction at 521 nm, with the intensity ratio linearly related to the Hg(II) concentration up to 1200 mu g/L, independent of matrix compositions. The M-CDs have a detection limit of 5.6 mu g/L, a response time of 1 min, and a spike recovery of 94 +/- 3.7%. The intensified emission is attributed to proton transfer and aggregation-induced emission enhancement, whereas the quenching is due to proton and electron transfer. These findings also have important implications for mercury identification in other complex matrices for routine, screening-level food safety and health management practices.
引用
收藏
页码:9887 / 9895
页数:9
相关论文