Durable Nanocellulose-Stabilized Emulsions of Dithizone/Chloroform in Water for Hg 2+ Detection: A Novel Approach for a Classical Problem.
Roberto J AguadoAndré MazegaNúria FiolQuim TarrésPere MutjéMarc Delgado-AguilarPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
The use of dithizone (DTZ) for colorimetric heavy-metal detection is approximately one century old. However, its pending stability issues and the need for simple indicators justify further research. Using cellulose nanofibers, we attained DTZ-containing emulsions with high stability. These emulsions had water (at least 95 wt %) and acetic acid (1-8 mL/L) conforming the continuous phase, while dispersed droplets of diameter <1 μm contained chloroform-solvated DTZ (3 wt %). The solvation cluster was computed by molecular dynamics simulations, suggesting that chloroform slightly reduces the dihedral angle between the two sides of the thiocarbazone chain. Nanocellulose concentrations over 0.2 wt % sufficed to obtain macroscopically homogeneous mixtures with no phase separation. Furthermore, the rate of degradation of DTZ in the nanocellulose-stabilized emulsion did not differ significantly from a DTZ/chloroform solution, outperforming DTZ/toluene and DTZ/acetonitrile. Not only is the emulsion readily and immediately responsive to mercury(II), but it also decreases interferences from other ions and from natural samples. Unexpectedly, neither lead(II) nor cadmium(II) triggered a visual response at trace concentrations. The limit of detection of these emulsions is 15 μM or 3 mg/L, exceeding WHO limits for mercury(II) in drinking water, but they could be effective at raising alarms.
Keyphrases
- molecular dynamics simulations
- drinking water
- heavy metals
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- health risk
- label free
- ionic liquid
- health risk assessment
- real time pcr
- risk assessment
- gold nanoparticles
- fluorescent probe
- sensitive detection
- magnetic resonance imaging
- hydrogen peroxide
- quantum dots
- computed tomography
- living cells
- optic nerve
- silver nanoparticles
- cancer therapy
- magnetic resonance
- single molecule
- sewage sludge