Abstract

Rapid component separation and reliable surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) detection of organochlorine pesticide (OCP) residues in real water samples remain major challenges because of sample complexity, trace content, and low molecular affinity for a metal surface. Here, we report a novel strategy of simultaneous in situ extraction and fabrication of plasmonic colloidal gold superparticles (AuSPs) to perform rapid SERS detection of OCPs in environmental water. In this protocol, multiple components of OCPs in complex water were facilely diffused into dichloromethane (DCM) microdroplets and specifically bound to octadecylamine-modified gold nanoparticles (Au-ODAs), affording the SERS substrate through self-assembly of the OCP-trapped Au-ODA into AuSPs with the evaporation of DCM. SERS signals of the specifically prepared Au-ODA could be used as an internal standard to calibrate the absolute signal of OCPs, and multiplex detection could be achieved depending on their molecularly narrow Raman peaks. As for simultaneously sensing four kinds of OCPs (4,4'-DDT, α-endosulfan, tetradifon, and chlordane) in water, the established method showed strong anti-interference ability and comparable quantification ranges with a low limit of detection (LOD). The recoveries ranged from 90.20 to 109.4% for OCPs in farmland, river, and fishpond water, indicating that the established AuSP-based platform is reliable and applicable to the detection of OCPs in real water samples.

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