Abstract

Herein, a new recipe is introduced for the preparation of hydrogen phosphate ion-imprinted polymer nanoparticles (nano-IIP) in acetonitrile/water (63.5:36.5) using phosphoric acid as the template. The nano-IIP obtained was used as the recognition element of a carbon paste potentiometric sensor. The IIP electrode showed a Nernstian response to hydrogen phosphate anion; whereas, the non-imprinted polymer (NIP)-based electrode had no considerable sensitivity to the anion. The presence of both methacrylic acid and vinyl pyridine in the IIP structure, as well as optimization of the functional monomers-template proportion, was found to be important to observe the sensing capability of the IIP electrode. The nano-IIP electrode showed a dynamic linear range of 1×10-5 -1×10-1 molL-1, Nernstian slope of 30.6±(0.5) mV decade -1 , response time of 25seconds, and detection limit of 4.0×10-6 mol L-1 . The utility of the electrodes was checked by potentiometric titration of hydrogen phosphate with La3+ solution.

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