Abstract

Mercury detection in humic matter-containing natural waters is often associated with environmental harmful substances for sample preparation. Herein we report an approach based on photoactive titanium dioxide films with embedded gold nanoparticles (AuNP@TiO2 dipstick) for chemical-free sample preparation and mercury preconcentration. For this purpose, AuNPs are immobilized onto a silicon wafer and further covered with a thin photoactive titanium dioxide layer. The AuNPs allow the preconcentration of Hg traces via amalgamation, while TiO2 acts as a protective layer and, at the same time, as a photocatalyst for UV-C radiation-based sample pretreatment. Humic matter, often present in natural waters, forms stabile complexes with Hg and so hinders its preconcentration prior to detection, causing a minor recovery. This problem is solved here by irradiation during Hg preconcentration onto the photoactive dipstick, resulting in a limit of detection as low as 0.137 ng L−1 using atomic fluorescence spectrometry (AFS). A 5 min preconcentration step is sufficient to obtain successful recovery of Hg traces from waters with up to 10 mg L−1 DOC. The feasibility of the approach was demonstrated by the determination of Hg traces in Danube river water. The results show no significant differences in comparison with standard cold vapor-atomic fluorescence spectrometry (CV-AFS) measurements of the same sample. Hence, this new AuNP@TiO2 dipstick provides a single-step sample preparation and preconcentration approach that combines sustainability with high analytical sensitivity and accuracy.

Highlights

  • Mercury is among the most toxic and critical pollutants in our environment

  • The results show no significant differences in comparison with standard cold vapor-atomic fluorescence spectrometry (CV-AFS) measurements of the same sample

  • A film of gold nanoparticles with a mean particle diameter of about 30 nm was first produced on a silicon wafer substrate through temperature-driven dewetting

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Summary

Introduction

Due to its long lifetime and high mobility, it is distributed globally in the atmosphere and the hydrosphere. Within the latter, Hg bioaccumulates in the food chain, reaching factors of up to 106 from ambient water to predatory fish [1]. Mercury is known to bind strongly to several naturally occurring inorganic and organic ligands, such as dissolved organic carbon (DOC) [2]. While in sea water chloro complexes are dominant due to the high salinity (≈19 g L−1 ) and low DOC concentration (

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