Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

engineering

Anthracene based surface acoustic wave sensors for picomolar detection of lead ions. Correlation between experimental results and DFT calculations

Sensors and Actuators, B: Chemical, Volume 276, Year 2018

104 MHz surface acoustic wave (SAW) sensors functionalized with new anthracene derivates were designed for the detection of lead ions (Pb2+) in liquid media. On the basis on quantum chemical calculations, three anthracene molecules have been synthetized and tested: 4-(9-anthrylmethoxy) benzyl[4-(9-anthrylmethoxy)phenyl]sulfone (BPS-AN); 9-{[4-({[4-(9 anthrylmethoxy) phenyl]sulfanyl}methyl)]methyl] anthracene (TDP-AN) and 2,2-bis(4 anthracenylmethoxy-1,1′-biphenyl (BP-AN). Gravimetric results indicate that the affinity of BPS-AN towards Pb2+ ions is superior to that of TDP-AN and BP-AN, confirming thus the computational approach. The designed BPS-AN SAW sensor has a sensitivity of [7.2 ± 4.6]×108 [°/M], a limit of detection (LOD) of 22 pM, and displayed very high affinity to lead ions with an apparent dissociation constant Kd of order of (1.1 ± 2.7) × 10−10. Selectivity was investigated by both gravimetry and DFT calculation. Results indicate that the designed sensor is more sensitive to lead cations than copper and mercury ones. A tetrabutylphosphonium (TBP) lactate ionic liquid (IL) solution was used to regenerate the SAW sensor, permitting its further reuse a dozen times without degrading the BPS-AN recognition layer.
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Citations: 19
Authors: 12
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