Fluorescent Metal-Organic Framework (MOF) as a Highly Sensitive and Quickly Responsive Chemical Sensor for the Detection of Antibiotics in Simulated Wastewater.
Xian-Dong ZhuKun ZhangYu WangWei-Wei LongRong-Jian SaTian-Fu LiuJian LüPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2018)
A Zn(II)-based fluorescent metal-organic framework (MOF) was synthesized and applied as a highly sensitive and quickly responsive chemical sensor for antibiotic detection in simulated wastewater. The fluorescent chemical sensor, denoted FCS-1, exhibited enhanced fluorescence derived from its highly ordered, 3D MOF structure as well as excellent water stability in the practical pH range of simulated antibiotic wastewater (pH = 3.0-9.0). Remarkably, FCS-1 was able to effectively detect a series of sulfonamide antibiotics via photoinduced electron transfer that caused detectable fluorescence quenching, with fairly low detection limits. Two influences impacting measurements related to wastewater treatment and water quality monitoring, the presence of heavy-metal ions and the pH of solutions, were studied in terms of fluorescence quenching, which was nearly unaffected in sulfonamide-antibiotic detection. Additionally, the effective detection of sulfonamide antibiotics was rationalized by the theoretical computation of the energy bands of sulfonamide antibiotics, which revealed a good match between the energy bands of FCS-1 and sulfonamide antibiotics, in connection with fluorescence quenching in this system.
Keyphrases
- metal organic framework
- wastewater treatment
- label free
- energy transfer
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- quantum dots
- heavy metals
- real time pcr
- single molecule
- living cells
- electron transfer
- antibiotic resistance genes
- water quality
- risk assessment
- cancer therapy
- microbial community
- health risk
- solid state
- liquid chromatography
- tandem mass spectrometry