| Literature DB >> 35424357 |
Qi Ding1,2, Liping Cao2, Minghuan Liu1, Hetong Lin2, Da-Peng Yang1,2.
Abstract
Eggshell is an extremely large source of domestic waste and has a huge scientific research potential because of its unique porous hierarchical structure. By converting eggshell waste into valuable functional materials, it can be recycled in many fields. Herein, we envisioned an economical and environmentally friendly conversion method for synthesizing Au nanoparticle loaded eggshell nanocomposites (defined as Au/CaCO3 nanocomposites) for the detection of trace amounts of nitrite in oolong tea. Compared with bare electrodes, the prepared Au/CaCO3 nanocomposite-based electrodes have obvious electrochemical enhancement behavior. A wide linear response range of 0.01 to 1.00 mM and a relatively low detection limit of 11.55 nM have been obtained in this study. The "turning waste into treasure" transformation strategy not only provides a practical and low-cost method for comprehensive utilization of eggshells as valuable functional materials, but also provides a new approach for sensitive detection of pollutants. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35424357 PMCID: PMC8694358 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra09892b
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1SEM images of (a) the natural eggshell powder; (b) the Au/CaCO3 nanocomposites; and (c) HR-TEM images of the Au nanoparticles on eggshell powder, (d) the corresponding EDS elemental mapping images of Au, Ca, O, and C.
Fig. 2(a) CV curves of bare GCE (red), Au/CaCO3-GCE in 100 μM NO2− (black) under phosphate buffer (pH = 7.5) and Au/CaCO3-GCE in pure buffer (blue) recorded at a scan rate of 50 mV s−1; (b) CV responses of Au/CaCO3 -GCE in 100 μM NO2− at 50 mV s−1 under phosphate buffer at varied pH from 6.0–8.5; (c) CV curves of Au/CaCO3-GCE in PBS (pH = 7.5) including 100 μM NO2− at varied scan rate from 10–100 mV s−1; (d) a liner correlation between the peak current and square root of scan rate.
Fig. 3(a) CV response of the Au/CaCO3-GCE in pH = 7.5 phosphate buffer at a scan rate of 50 mV s−1 under consecutive addition of NO2− (concentrations within 1–300 μM), (b) the liner correlations plot of response current versus NO2− concentrations.
Fig. 4Chronoamperometric graph of Au/CaCO3-modified-GCE in 20 mL pH = 7.5 phosphate buffer solution at 1.0 V of the successive additions of NO2− at a regular time interval of 50 s.
Determination of NO2− in different samples at Au/CaCO3-GCE by CVa
| Sample | Added (μM) | Found (μM) | RSD (%) | Recovery (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tap water | 2.00 | 1.89 | 2.14 | 94.50 |
| River water | 2.00 | 1.85 | 1.93 | 92.50 |
| Industrial waste | 2.00 | 2.25 | 3.12 | 112.50 |
| Oolong tea | 2.00 | 1.79 | 2.47 | 89.50 |
All measurements are an average of n = 5.
An overview on recently reported modified electrodes and their performance compared to the NO2− sensors
| Electrode | Method | LOD (μM) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| CuO-GCE | CV | 0.400 |
|
| MOF-525 | DPV | 2.100 |
|
| Co3O4/RGO-GC | CV | 0.140 |
|
| Au–Cu-nanochain/GC | DPV | 0.200 |
|
| Cu/MWCNTs/GC | DPV | 1.800 |
|
| Au/CaCO3-GCE | CV | 0.01155 | This work |