1 research outputs found
Electrochemosensor for Trace Analysis of Perfluorooctanesulfonate in Water Based on a Molecularly Imprinted Poly(<i>o</i>‑phenylenediamine) Polymer
This
work is aimed at developing an electrochemical sensor for
the sensitive and selective detection of trace levels of perfluorooctanesulfonate
(PFOS) in water. Contamination of waters by perfluorinated alkyl substances
(PFAS) is a problem of global concern due to their suspected toxicity
and ability to bioaccumulate. PFOS is the perfluorinated compound
of major concern, as it has the lowest suggested control concentrations.
The sensor reported here is based on a gold electrode modified with
a thin coating of a molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP), prepared
by anodic electropolymerization of <i>o</i>-phenylenediamine
(o-PD) in the presence of PFOS as the template. Activation of the
sensor is achieved by template removal with suitable a solvent mixture.
Voltammetry, a quartz crystal microbalance, scanning electron microscopy
and elemental analysis were used to monitor the electropolymerization
process, template removal, and binding of the analyte. Ferrocenecarboxylic
acid (FcCOOH) has been exploited as an electrochemical probe able
to generate analytically useful voltammetric signals by competing
for the binding sites with PFOS, as the latter is not electroactive.
The sensor has a low detection limit (0.04 nM), a satisfactory selectivity,
and is reproducible and repeatable, giving analytical results in good
agreement with those obtained by HPLC-MS/MS analyses