Abstract

Triphenyl phosphate (TPHP), a typical kind of organophosphorus flame retardants (OPFRs) with aryl groups, has been recognized as an emerging contaminant that causes environmental and health hazards. It is a pervasive threat that can be frequently detected in the environment and living organisms. Hence, establishing an efficient analytical method for TPHP is an urgent issue. In this work, a heteropolyacid (HPA)-luminol chemiluminescence strategy coupled with UV-assisted persulfate (PS) activation was proposed for the sensitive and selective detection of TPHP. The UV-assisted PS oxidation pretreatment could decompose the water-insoluble TPHP into smaller orthophosphates, which were further converted into HPA with the subsequently introduced vanadium‑molybdenum acid. The formed HPA served as a catalyst to oxidize luminol, and strong chemiluminescence at 425 nm was generated immediately. Furthermore, the degradation process of TPHP and chemiluminescence mechanism were also investigated. The results demonstrated that some reactive oxygen radicals such as SO4-, OH, 1O2, and O2-, were involved in the degradation and chemiluminescence reaction. Notably, this proposed chemiluminescence analytical strategy realized a highly sensitive detection for TPHP, and granted the limit of detection down to 0.38 ppt. This study provides an attractive perspective for the detection of emerging OPFRs.

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