Multi-Emission Carbon Dots Combining Turn-On Sensing and Fluorescence Quenching Exhibit Ultrahigh Selectivity for Mercury in Real Water Samples.
Panpan ZhuSheng-Li HouZhenhai LiuYinzhu ZhouPedro J J AlvarezWei ChenTong ZhangPublished in: Environmental science & technology (2024)
Mercury is a ubiquitous heavy-metal pollutant and poses serious ecological and human-health risks. There is an ever-growing demand for rapid, sensitive, and selective detection of mercury in natural waters, particularly for regions lacking infrastructure specialized for mercury analysis. Here, we show that a sensor based on multi-emission carbon dots (M-CDs) exhibits ultrahigh sensing selectivity toward Hg(II) in complex environmental matrices, tested in the presence of a range of environmentally relevant metal/metalloid ions as well as natural and artificial ligands, using various real water samples. By incorporating structural features of calcein and folic acid that enable tunable emissions, the M-CDs couple an emission enhancement at 432 nm and a simultaneous reduction at 521 nm, with the intensity ratio linearly related to the Hg(II) concentration up to 1200 μg/L, independent of matrix compositions. The M-CDs have a detection limit of 5.6 μg/L, a response time of 1 min, and a spike recovery of 94 ± 3.7%. The intensified emission is attributed to proton transfer and aggregation-induced emission enhancement, whereas the quenching is due to proton and electron transfer. These findings also have important implications for mercury identification in other complex matrices for routine, screening-level food safety and health management practices.
Keyphrases
- quantum dots
- electron transfer
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- energy transfer
- healthcare
- human health
- heavy metals
- sensitive detection
- fluorescent probe
- endothelial cells
- solid state
- public health
- photodynamic therapy
- living cells
- mental health
- climate change
- risk assessment
- label free
- aqueous solution
- palliative care
- real time pcr
- single molecule
- health information
- high intensity
- health risk
- social media
- pluripotent stem cells