Abstract

A simple and sensitive method was developed for the detection of mercury ions with quartz crystal microbalance (QCM), based on the specific thymine-Hg(2+)-thymine (T-Hg(2+)-T) interaction and gold nanoparticle-mediated signal amplification. To enhance the sensitivity of detection a sandwich hybridization approach was adopted in this work. The QCM gold surface was modified with the probe SH-oligonucleotides (Oligo-1) and 6-Mercapto-1-hexanol to form an active surface for the hybridization of a longer ss-DNA (Oligo-2), and then Oligo-3 hybridazated with an excess and matching part of Oligo-2. In all oligonucleotides, there existed T bases. In the presence of Hg(2+) ions, special T-Hg(2+)-T reaction greatly enhanced the hybridization of oligonucleotides and detection sensitivity. The gold nanoparticle (Au NPs) amplifier method further increased the sensitivity of detection. A detection sensitivity of 5nM Hg(2+) was obtained in the QCM system, whereas other coexisting metal ions (such as Ni(2+), Mg(2+), Co(2+), Cr(3+), Pb(2+), Cd(2+), Mn(2+), Ba(2+)) had no significant interference. This method reveals a new approach for the manufacture of a kind of simple and low cost sensors for the Hg(2+) detection.

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