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Detection of cyanide ions in aqueous solutions using cost effective colorimetric sensor. | LitMetric

Detection of cyanide ions in aqueous solutions using cost effective colorimetric sensor.

J Hazard Mater

Department of Chemical Engineering, Feng Chia University, 100, Wenhwa Road, Seatwen, Taichung 40724, Taiwan, ROC.

Published: July 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cyanide (CN̄) is highly toxic, making the development of effective diagnostic tools for its detection crucial, particularly in water where interference occurs.
  • The study presents two chemical sensors, S1 and S2, which exhibit distinct visual and spectral changes in response to CN̄ and other anions in various concentrations of aqueous DMSO solutions.
  • S1 is designed for detecting CN̄ specifically and has been used to create affordable paper-based test strips for detecting CN̄ in pure water.

Article Abstract

Cyanide (CN̄) is one of the most toxic material to the human and environment. It is very important to develop the diagnostic tools for the detection of CN̄ ions. Moreover, detection of the ions in an aqueous medium is a challenging task as water molecules interfere with the sensing mechanism. In this context, we prepared chemical sensor, S1, having anthraquinone as a signaling unit and thiourea as a binding site. This sensor exhibited distinct visual color and spectral changes in response to CN̄ ion over other testing anions in 50% aq. DMSO solution. However, in 20% aq. DMSO solution, S1 exhibited obvious spectral and color changes in response to CN̄, fluoride (F̄), acetate (Ac̄) and benzoate (Bz̄). Another sensor, S2, having a same signaling unit with that of S1, but a different binding site of urea group. In contrast to S1, S2 exhibited obvious spectral and color changes to F̄ in 2.5% aq. DMSO solution. NMR titration results suggested that the spectral and colorimetric responses were due to the formation of host-guest complex and deprotonation events. Finally, economically viable paper-based colorimetric "test stripes" of S1 were fabricated to detect the CN̄ ions in 100% aqueous solution.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2017.04.001DOI Listing

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