Abstract

Heavy metal contaminants have serious consequences for the environment and human health. Consequently, effective methods for detecting their presence, particularly in water and food, are urgently required. Accordingly, the present study proposes a sensor capable of detecting mercury Hg(II) and lead Pb(II) ions simultaneously, using graphene oxide (GO) as a quenching agent and an aptamer solution as a reagent. In the proposed device, the aptamer sequences are labeled by FAM and HEX fluorescent dyes, respectively, and are mixed well with 500 ppm GO solution before injection into one inlet of the microchannel, and the heavy metal sample solution is injected into another inlet. The presence of Hg(II) and Pb(II) ions is then detected by measuring the change in the fluorescence intensity of the GO/aptamer suspension as the aptamer molecules undergo fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). The selectivity of these two ions is also shown to be clear among other mixed heavy metal ions. The experimental results show that the aptamer sensors have a linear range of 10~250 nM (i.e., 2.0~50 ppb) for Hg(II) ions and 10~100 nM (i.e., 2.1~20.7 ppb) for Pb(II) ions. Furthermore, the limit of detection is around 0.70 ppb and 0.53 ppb for Hg(II) and Pb(II), respectively, which is lower than the maximum limits of 6 ppb and 10 ppb prescribed by the World Health Organization (WHO) for Hg(II) and Pb(II) in drinking water, respectively.

Highlights

  • Pollution caused by human activity is a serious worldwide problem nowadays, with massive environmental, financial and health ramifications

  • During the past few years, many methods using different instruments have been reported for mercury and lead ion detection, including inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) [5,6], cold-vapor atomic fluorescence spectroscopy (CV-AFS) [7], high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) [8], colorimetric sensors [9], magnetic beads [10], nanopore sensors [11,12], surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) [13], electrochemical sensors [14,15] and aptasensors [16,17]

  • A mixed graphene oxide (GO)/fluorescent-labeled aptamer solution is injected into the lower inlet of the device, while a solution containing Hg2+ or Pb2+ ions is injected to improve the repeatability of the experimental results

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Summary

Introduction

Pollution caused by human activity is a serious worldwide problem nowadays, with massive environmental, financial and health ramifications. During the past few years, many methods using different instruments have been reported for mercury and lead ion detection, including inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) [5,6], cold-vapor atomic fluorescence spectroscopy (CV-AFS) [7], high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) [8], colorimetric sensors [9], magnetic beads [10], nanopore sensors [11,12], surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) [13], electrochemical sensors [14,15] and aptasensors [16,17]. A mixed GO/fluorescent-labeled aptamer solution is injected into the lower inlet (inlet 2) of the device, while a solution containing Hg2+ or Pb2+ ions is injected to improve the repeatability of the experimental results .

Methods
Evaluation of Mixing Efficiency
Evaluation of Quenching Efficiency
Experimental Setup
Experimental setup forPb
Results
Conclusions
Full Text
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