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Microwave-Assisted Synthesis of Red Emitting Copper Nanoclusters Using Trypsin as a Ligand for Sensing of Pb 2+ And Hg 2+ Ions in Water and Tobacco Samples.

Dharaben J Joshinull LalrinhlupuiiNaved I MalekRajendra Bose MuthukumaranSuresh Kumar Kailasa
Published in: Applied spectroscopy (2022)
In this work, a microwave assisted method was developed for synthesis of red fluorescent copper nanoclusters (NCs) using trypsin as a template (trypsin-Cu). The as-synthesized trypsin-Cu NCs are stable and water soluble, exhibiting fluorescence emission at 657 nm when excited at 490 nm. The as-prepared red-emitting trypsin-Cu NCs were characterized by using several analytical techniques such as ultraviolet-visible (UV-Vis) and fluorescence, fluorescence lifetime, Fourier transform infrared, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic techniques. Red-emitting trypsin-Cu NCs acted as a nanosensor for sensing both Pb 2+ and Hg 2+ ions through fluorescence quenching. Using this approach, good linearities are observed in the range of 0.1-25 and of 0.001-1 μM with the lower limit of detection of 14.63 and 56.81 nM for Pb 2+ and Hg 2+ ions, respectively. Trypsin-Cu NCs-based fluorescence assay was successfully applied to detect both Hg 2+ and Pb 2+ ions in water and tobacco samples.
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