Publication detail
Silica quantum dots; an optical nanosensing approach for trace detection of pesticides in environmental and biological samples
Nazir, Fazila Asad, Muhammad Fatima, Lamia Bokhari, Awais Majeed, Saadat Fatima, Batool Mohammed, Abdallah A. A. Karri, Rama Rao
English title
Silica quantum dots; an optical nanosensing approach for trace detection of pesticides in environmental and biological samples
Type
journal article in Web of Science
Language
en
Original abstract
Both the environment and human health have suffered as a result of excessive and irrational pesticide use. The human body is vulnerable to a wide range of illnesses brought on by prolonged exposure to or intake of food contaminated with pesticide residues, including immunological and hormonal abnormalities and the development of certain tumors. Sensors based on nanoparticles stand out from more conventional spectrophotometry analytical methods due to their low detection limits, high sensitivity, and ease of use; that is why the demand for simple, fast, and less expensive sensing methods increases daily and presents myriad uses. Such demands are fulfilled by employing paper-based analytical devices having intrinsic properties. The presented work reports an on-site, easy-to-handle, and disposable paper-based sensing device for performing fast screening along with readout from a smartphone. The fabricated device utilizes luminescent silica quantum dots, immobilized into a paper cellulose matrix, and the resonance energy transfer phenomenon is employed. The silica quantum dots probes were fabricated from citric acid and, by undergoing physical adsorption, were confined on the nitrocellulose substrate in small wax-traced spots. The silica quantum dots were excited by smartphone ultraviolet LED, acting as an energy source and for capturing the image. The obtained LOD is 0.054 μM, and the coefficient of variation is less than 6.1%, comparable to the result obtained by UV–Visible and fluorometric analysis under similar experimental conditions. In addition, high reproducibility (≥9.8%) and high recovery ≥90% were obtained in spiked blood samples. The fabricated sensor sensitively detected pesticides giving a LOD of 2.5 ppm along with the development of yellow color within a short period of 5 min. The sensor functions well when sophisticated instrumentation is not accessible. The presented work shows the potential of the paper strip for the on-site detection of pesticides in biological and environmental samples.
English abstract
Both the environment and human health have suffered as a result of excessive and irrational pesticide use. The human body is vulnerable to a wide range of illnesses brought on by prolonged exposure to or intake of food contaminated with pesticide residues, including immunological and hormonal abnormalities and the development of certain tumors. Sensors based on nanoparticles stand out from more conventional spectrophotometry analytical methods due to their low detection limits, high sensitivity, and ease of use; that is why the demand for simple, fast, and less expensive sensing methods increases daily and presents myriad uses. Such demands are fulfilled by employing paper-based analytical devices having intrinsic properties. The presented work reports an on-site, easy-to-handle, and disposable paper-based sensing device for performing fast screening along with readout from a smartphone. The fabricated device utilizes luminescent silica quantum dots, immobilized into a paper cellulose matrix, and the resonance energy transfer phenomenon is employed. The silica quantum dots probes were fabricated from citric acid and, by undergoing physical adsorption, were confined on the nitrocellulose substrate in small wax-traced spots. The silica quantum dots were excited by smartphone ultraviolet LED, acting as an energy source and for capturing the image. The obtained LOD is 0.054 μM, and the coefficient of variation is less than 6.1%, comparable to the result obtained by UV–Visible and fluorometric analysis under similar experimental conditions. In addition, high reproducibility (≥9.8%) and high recovery ≥90% were obtained in spiked blood samples. The fabricated sensor sensitively detected pesticides giving a LOD of 2.5 ppm along with the development of yellow color within a short period of 5 min. The sensor functions well when sophisticated instrumentation is not accessible. The presented work shows the potential of the paper strip for the on-site detection of pesticides in biological and environmental samples.
Keywords in English
Biological samples; Luminescence; Paper-based nanosensing; Pesticide; Silica quantum dots
Released
15.08.2023
Publisher
ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE525 B ST, STE 1900, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101-4495
Location
ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE525 B ST, STE 1900, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101-4495
ISSN
0013-9351
Volume
231
Number
2
Pages count
8
BIBTEX
@article{BUT187360,
author="Syed Awais Ali Shah {Bokhari},
title="Silica quantum dots; an optical nanosensing approach for trace detection of pesticides in environmental and biological samples",
year="2023",
volume="231",
number="2",
month="August",
publisher="ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE525 B ST, STE 1900, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101-4495",
address="ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE525 B ST, STE 1900, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101-4495",
issn="0013-9351"
}