Abstract

Thepossibility of a multifunctional and reversible solid-state colorimetric sensor is describedfor the identification and quantification of ultra-trace Cd2+ and Hg2+ ions, using a honeycomb-structured mesoporous silica monolith conjoined with an indigenous chromoionophoric probe, i.e., 4-hexyl-6-((5-mercapto-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-yl)diazenyl)benzene-1,3-diol (HMTAR). The amphiphilic probe is characterized using NMR, FT-IR, HR-MS, and CHNS elemental analysis. The structural and surface properties of the monolithic template have been characterized using p-XRD, XPS, TEM-SAED, SEM-EDAX, FT-IR, TG-DTA, and N2 isotherm analysis. The unique structural features and distinct analytical properties of the solid-state sensor proffer a strong response in selectively signaling the target analytes. The probe (HMTAR) exhibits a 1:1 stoichiometric binding ratio with the target ions (Cd2+ & Hg2+), with a visual color change from pale orange to dark red for Cd2+ (525nm, λmax), and topurple for Hg2+ (530nm, λmax), respectively, in the pH range 7.0-8.0. The influence of variousanalytical criteria such as pH, temperature, response kinetics, critical probe concentration, sensor quantity, matrix tolerance, linear response range, reusability, the limit of detection (LOD), and quantification (LOQ) has been investigatedto validate the sensor performance. The proposed method displays a linear signal response in the concentration range 5-100μg/L, with a LOD value of 2.67 and 2.90μg/L, for Cd2+ and Hg2+, respectively. The real-world efficacy of the sensor material has been tested with real and synthetic water samples with a significant recovery value of ≥ 99.2%, to authenticate its data reliability and reproducibility (RSD ≤ 3.53%). Graphical abstract.

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