Abstract

The efficient preparation of ratiometric fluorescent molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) microspheres that can directly and selectively optosense a herbicide (i.e., 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, 2,4-D) in undiluted pure milk is described. Thedual fluorescent MIP microparticles were readily obtained through grafting a green 4-nitrobenzo[c][1,2,5]oxadiazole (NBD)-labeled 2,4-D-MIP layer with hydrophilic polymer brushes onto the preformed uniform "living" red CdTe quantum dot (QD)-labeled SiO2 microspheres via one-pot surface-initiated atom transfer radical polymerization (SI-ATRP) in the presence of a polyethylene glycol macro-ATRP initiator. They proved to be highly promising "turn-on"-type fluorescent chemosensors with red CdTe QD (the maximum emission wavelength λe,max around 710nm) and green NBD (λe,max around 515nm) as the reference fluorophore and "turn-on"-type responsive fluorophore, respectively. The sensors showed excellent photostability and reusability, high 2,4-D selectivity and sensitivity (the limit of detection = 0.12μM), and direct visual detection ability (a fluorescent color change occurs from red to blue-green with the concentration of 2,4-D increasing from 0 to 100μM) in pure bovine milk. The sensorswere used for 2,4-D detection with high recoveries (96.0-104.0%) and accuracy (RSD ≤ 4.0%) in pure goat milk at three spiking levels of both 2,4-D and its mixtures with several analogues. This new strategy lays the foundation for efficiently developing diverse complex biological sample-compatible ratiometric fluorescent MIPs highly useful for real-world bioanalyses and diagnostics.

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