| Literature DB >> 31491964 |
Seo Yeong Oh1, Min Ji Lee1, Nam Su Heo1,2, Suji Kim1, Jeong Su Oh1, Yuseon Lee1, Eun Jeong Jeon1, Hyungsil Moon3, Hyung Soo Kim3, Tae Jung Park4, Guiim Moon5, Hyang Sook Chun6, Yun Suk Huh7.
Abstract
The globalization of food distribution has made necessary to secure safe products to the general consumers through the rapid detection of harmful additives on the field. For this purpose, we developed a cuvette-type localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) sensor that can be easily used by consumers with conventional ultraviolet-visible light spectrophotometer for in-situ measurements. Gold nanoparticles were uniformly deposited on a transparent substrate via a self-assembly method to obtain a plasmonically active chip, and the chemical receptor p-nitroaniline (p-NA) was functionalized to stabilize the device sensitivity under external temperature and pH conditions. The fabricated chip was fixed onto a support and combined with a cuvette-type LSPR sensor. To evaluate the applicability of this sensor on the field, sensitivity and quantitative analysis experiments were conducted onto melamine as a model sample from harmful food additives. Under optimal reaction condition (2 mM p-NA for 20 min), we achieved an excellent detection limit (0.01 ppb) and a dynamic range allowing quantitative analysis over a wide concentration range (0.1-1000 ppb) from commercially available milk powder samples.Entities:
Keywords: LSPR; cuvette-type chip; infant formula; melamine; p-NA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31491964 PMCID: PMC6766901 DOI: 10.3390/s19183839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Scheme 1Schematic illustration of the p-nitroaniline-based plasmonically active chip for melamine detection.
Figure 1Optimum conditions for melamine detection by p-NA-based localized surface plasmon resonance sensor chip. (a) Optical (left) and scanning electron microscopy (right) images of an optimized plasmonically active substrate. Effect of the p-NA (b) concentrations and (c) immobilization time on the plasmonically active substrate. All experiments were performed with five measurements, and the data represent mean ± standard deviation.
Figure 2Melamine detection by p-NA-based cuvette-type LSPR sensor. Peak (wavelength) shift for different melamine concentrations (0–1000 ppb). (a) The change of the plasmon spectrum and (b) the linear correlation with the melamine concentration in standard solution. All experiments were performed with five measurements, and the data represent mean ± standard deviation. The coefficient of variation (% CV) is below 10%.
Figure 3Specific melamine detection in infant formulas. (a) The change of the plasmon spectrum and (b) the linear correlation with the melamine concentration in melamine-spiked infant formulas. All experiments were performed with five measurements, and the data represent mean ± standard deviation. The coefficient of variation (% CV) is below 10%.
Limits of detection (LODs) of various melamine analytical methods in infant formula.
| Method | Comment | Receptor | LOD | Linear Range | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Colorimetry (AuNPs) | Simple, sensitive, low cost, on-site applicability | 1-(2-mercaptoethyl)-1,3,5-triazinane-2,4,6-trione (MTT) | 2.5 ppb | [ | |
| Colorimetry (AgNPs) | 0.1 ppm | [ | |||
| HPLC | Complex, expensive, time-consuming, and sensitive | 0.1 ppm | 1.0–80 ppm | [ | |
| SPR | MEL-Ab | 1.4 ppb | 1.4–172 ppb | [ | |
| SERS | 4-mercaptopyridine (MPY) | 0.1 ppb | 0.5–100 ppb | [ | |
| FTIR/NIR | Low sensitivity | 1 ppm | [ | ||
| LSPR | Simple, high sensitivity, low cost, and on-site applicability | 0.01 ppb | 0.01 ppb–1000 ppb | This work |
Figure 4Melamine selectivity of p-NA-based cuvette-type LSPR sensor from DW additionally containing various harmful additives such as melamine, cyanuric acid, uracil, urea, and m-phenylenediamine. The concentration of melamine and the other substances are 100 ppb. All experiments were performed with five measurements, and the data represent mean ± standard deviation. The coefficient of variation (% CV) is below 10%.