| Literature DB >> 29522472 |
Wei Li1, Yongping Zheng2, Tingwei Zhang3, Songjie Wu4, Jue Zhang5,6, Jing Fang7,8.
Abstract
Molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) films prepared by bulk polymerization suffer from numerous deficiencies, including poor mass transfer ability and difficulty in controlling reaction rate and film thickness, which usually result in poor repeatability. However, polymer film synthesized by electropolymerization methods benefit from high reproducibility, simplicity and rapidity of preparation. In the present study, an Au film served as the refractive index-sensitive metal film to couple with the light leaked out from optical fiber core and the electrode for electropolymerizing MIP film simultaneously. The manufactured probe exhibited satisfactory sensitivity and specificity. Furthermore, the surface morphology and functional groups of the synthesized MIP film were characterized by Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) and Fourier transform infrared microspectroscopy (FTIR) for further insights into the adsorption and desorption processes. Given the low cost, label-free test, simple preparation process and fast response, this method has a potential application to monitor substances in complicated real samples for out-of-lab test in the future.Entities:
Keywords: electropolymerization; melamine; molecular imprinting; optical fiber probe; surface plasmon resonance
Year: 2018 PMID: 29522472 PMCID: PMC5876666 DOI: 10.3390/s18030828
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the experimental setup and the fabrication process of PoAP–MEL probe.
Figure 2Cyclic voltammogram for the electropolymerization of MIP film on Au surface. Scan rate: 50 mV/s; number of scans: 30; potential range: −0.3 V to 1.2 V.
Figure 3FTIR spectrum of (a) PoAP–MEL film (b) oAP.
FTIR peaks assignment for PoAP–MEL and oAP.
| Vibration Assignments for PoAP | Wave Number, |
|---|---|
| N–H stretching vibrations in secondary amines [ | 3351 |
| N-H bending | 1593 |
| C=C stretching of aromatic ring | 1501 |
| O–H deformation vibration and C–O stretching vibration of phenols [ | 1274 |
| C–O stretching vibration of phenols [ | 1207 |
| Vibration assignments for oAP | Wave number, |
| N-H bending in primary amines [ | 1585 |
| C=C stretching of aromatic ring | 1612 |
| C=C stretching of aromatic ring [ | 1512 |
| C=C stretching of aromatic ring [ | 1478 |
| Asymmetrical N–H stretching vibrations [ | 3377 |
| Symmetrical N–H stretching vibrations [ | 3307 |
| C–O–H deformation vibrations of phenols [ | 1407 |
| O–H deformation vibration and C–O stretching vibration of phenols [ | 1270 |
| C–O stretching vibration of phenols [ | 1216 |
Figure 4Contact mode 3D AFM images of: (a) PoAP–MEL film, (b) PoAP–MEL film removed template MEL and (c) NIP film. RMS are 1.04 nm, 0.87 nm and 0.61 nm respectively.
Figure 5(a) SPR spectra for detection of melamine solution with concentration ranging from 0 M to M; (b) shift in resonance wavelength for the detection of melamine solution with concentration ranging from 0 M to M.
Figure 6Sensitivity of PoAP–MEL OF-SPR probe for the detection of melamine solution with concentration ranging from 0 M to M.
Figure 7Recognition ability of PoAP–MEL film. Resonance wavelength shift for the detection of melamine solution with concentration ranging from 0 M to M.
Figure 8Specificity test of PoAP–MEL film. Resonance wavelength shift for the detection of acrylamide, tetracycline, urea, glucose and melamine solution with concentration ranging from 0 M to M.
Limit of detection and operating range of various approaches for melamine reported in previous study.
| Technique | Operating Range | Limit of Detection |
|---|---|---|
| This work |
|
|
| Impedimetric probe [ |
|
|
| LC–UV and GC–MSD [ | – | 10 ppb |
| DAPCI–MS [ |
|
|
| HPLC [ | – | 5 |
| Electrochemical probe [ |
|
|
| LC/MS [ | – | 0.008 |
| Ion–pair LC–ESI–MS/MS [ | 0.5–100 | 0.01 |
| GC–MS and UPLC–MS/MS [ | 1–1000 | 10 and 5 |
| GC/MS [ | 0.05–2 | 0.01 |
| Electrochemistry (MIP/GCE) [ |
|
|
| Electrochemistry (oligonucleotides/Au) [ |
|
|
| MIP/CL [ |
| 0.02 |
| Electrochemistry (MIP/potentiometric probe) [ |
|
|
| LC [ | 1–400 | 65 |
| HPLC–MS/MS [ | 20–500 |
|
| GC–MS/MS [ | 0.04–1.6 | 0.002 |
| UV [ | 1.26–10 |
|
| CZE [ | – |
|
| Electrochemistry (acoustic probe) [ | 5 nM–1 mM | 5 nM |