Abstract
This study focuses on a new type of fast responsive solid-state visual colorimetric sensor, custom engineered with dual-entwined porous polymer imbued with chromoionophoric 4-(sec-butyl)− 2-((5-mercapto-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-yl)diazenyl)phenol (SMDP) probe for selective and ultra-sensitive colorimetric sensing of Cd(II). The polymer monolith, i.e., poly(aminostyrene-co-trimethylolpropanetrimethacrylate) denoted as poly(AMST-co-TRIM), is designed through a stoichiometric blending of monomer, crosslinker, and porogens leading to superior surface area, pore and adsorption properties for the voluminous incorporation of SMDP probe for target specific ion sensing. The porosity, surface and structural characteristics of the poly(AMST-co-TRIM)monolith and poly(AMST-co-TRIM)SMDP sensor are investigated using p-XRD, XPS, TG-DTA, FT-IR, BET/BJH, FE-SEM, HR-TEM, EDAX, and SAED techniques. The poly(AMST-co-TRIM)SMDP sensor reveals a frozen geometrical orientation of SMDP molecules to bind selectively with Cd(II), forming stable charge-transfer complexes by exhibiting transitional visible color shifts from light yellow to dark green (λmax 608 nm). The sensor imposes a linear response from 0–200 ppb, with quantification and detection limits of 0.95 and 0.28 ppb. The fabricated sensor material is cost-effective and versatile in its solid-state naked-eye sensing, with excellent reusability. The sensor performance has been verified using various environmentally contaminated water and commercial cigarette samples, with a recovery of ≥ 99.12% and an RSD of ≤ 1.95%, thus reflecting exceptional data reproducibility/reliability.
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