| Literature DB >> 34945311 |
Chenyu Xiong1,2, Yun Hui3, Ri Wang1,2, Chao Bian1, Yuhao Xu1,2, Yong Xie1,2, Mingjie Han1,2, Shanhong Xia1,2.
Abstract
Trace mercury ion (Hg2+) detection is important for environmental monitoring and water safety. In this work, we study the electrochemical strategy to detect trace Hg2+ based on the preconcentration of temperature-controlled N-octylpyridinium tetrafluoroborate ([OPy][BF4]) dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction. The [OPy][BF4] selectively extracted Hg2+ from aqueous solution by the adsorption of unsaturated N in [OPy][BF4], which increased the concentration of Hg2+ and decreased that of other interference ions. It was noted that the adsorption of [OPy][BF4] to Hg2+ was weakened by aqueous solution. Hence, after extraction, precipitated [OPy][BF4] was diluted by a buffer solution comprising a mixture of water and acetonitrile to release Hg2+ and the single was detected by electrochemistry. Water is proposed to release Hg2+ adsorbed by [OPy][BF4], and the acetonitrile serves as a co-solvent in buffer solution. Sensitivity and anti-inference ability of sensors were improved using the proposed method and Hg2+ releasing procedure. The detection limit (S/N = 3) of the sensor is 0.0315 μg/L with a linear range from 0.1 to 1 μg/L. And the sensor exhibits good recovery with an range from 106 % to 118%, which has great potential for trace Hg2+ determination.Entities:
Keywords: electrochemical sensor; ionic liquid; liquid–liquid extraction; mercury ions detection
Year: 2021 PMID: 34945311 PMCID: PMC8704221 DOI: 10.3390/mi12121461
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1Graphical illustration of the detection of mercury. (a,b) The mercury dissolved IL achieving saturated IL aqueous solution at 80 °C; (c) then temperature decreased to 25 °C with IL droplets suspending in the emulsion. After (d,e) centrifugation and separation, (f) the IL was moved into a 1.5 mL tube. After (g,h) centrifugation and separation again, (i) the IL phase was mixed with ACN and water solution containing the HCl. (j) Mercury ions were detected by DPSV. ((a–h) the process of TC-DLLME, (i,j) electrochemical detection).
Figure 2(a) The H-NMR of [OPy][BF]; (b) the H-NMR of [OPy][BF] with 10 M Hg and pure [OPy][BF]. The [OPy][BF] was dissolved in deuterated acetonitrile (CDCN).
Figure 3Solution appearance and DPSV signal of mercury during TC-DLPME; (a) IL is completely dissolved in the sample; (b) IL is separated from the sample. The initial solution contains 100 gL Hg and deposited potential was 0 V, and the deposited time was the 60 s.
Figure 4(a) the current response curve in ACN buffer and the buffer of water and ACN respectively; (b) the PL Intensity curve in ACN buffer and the buffer of water and ACN, respectively. ( Fw = V: V + V).
Figure 5Effect of the detection solution system. The deposition potential was 0.1 V and the deposition time was 240 s.
Figure 6The current peak of Hg in different deposition time.
Figure 7(a) current response of different Hg concentrations; (b) liner response curve to Hg.
Figure 8Current peak in the presence of 10 g/L marked metal ions followed by the addition of 1 g/L Hg with the blank solution subtracted.
Analytical result by the TC-IL-DLLME-DPSV method in tap water.
| Tap Water | Added ( | AFS ( | Detected ( | Recovery |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tap water 1 | 0.3 | 0.31 ± 0.01 | 0.32 ± 0.02 | 106% |
| Tap water 2 | 0.5 | 0.53 ± 0.01 | 0.58 ± 0.07 | 116% |
| Tap water 3 | 1 | 1.09 ± 0.01 | 1.18 ± 0.08 | 118% |
Comparison of analytical performance for the determination of trace mercury in the aqueous sample.
| Electrode | Method | LOD ( | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| BieAuNPs/CPE | SWASW | 0.3 | [ |
| SePs-AuNPs/CPE | DPSV | 1.02 | [ |
| Fe3O4/DNA/GCE | DPSV | 0.066 | [ |
| Gold electrode | DPSV | 0.031 | This work |