Litcius/Paper detail

Copper Nanoparticles Confined in a Silica Nanochannel Film for the Electrochemical Detection of Nitrate Ions in Water Samples

Dewang Li, Shuai Xu, Haiyan Jin, Jinqing Wang, Fei Yan

2023Molecules35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The nitrate ion (NO3−) is a typical pollutant in environmental samples, posing a threat to the aquatic ecosystem and human health. Therefore, rapid and accurate detection of NO3− is crucial for both the aquatic sciences and government regulations. Here we report the fabrication of an amino-functionalized, vertically ordered mesoporous silica film (NH2-VMSF) confining localized copper nanoparticles (CuNPs) for the electrochemical detection of NO3−. NH2-VMSF-carrying amino groups possess an ordered perpendicular nanochannel structure and ultrasmall nanopores, enabling the confined growth of CuNPs through the electrodeposition method. The resulting CuNPs/NH2-VMSF-modified indium tin oxide (ITO) electrode (CuNPs/NH2-VMSF/ITO) combines the electrocatalytic reduction ability of CuNPs and the electrostatic attraction capacity of NH2-VMSF towards NO3−. Thus, it is a rapid and sensitive electrochemical method for the determination of NO3− with a wide linear detection range of 5.0–1000 μM and a low detection limit of 2.3 μM. Direct electrochemical detection of NO3− in water samples (tap water, lake water, seawater, and rainwater) with acceptable recoveries ranging from 97.8% to 109% was performed, demonstrating that the proposed CuNPs/NH2-VMSF/ITO sensor has excellent reproducibility, regeneration, and anti-interference abilities.

Topics & Concepts

Tap waterDetection limitNanoparticleMaterials scienceElectrochemistryIndium tin oxideChemical engineeringElectrochemical gas sensorCopper sulfideNanotechnologyElectrodeCopperNitrateInorganic chemistryChemistryChromatographyThin filmMetallurgyPhysical chemistryOrganic chemistryEnvironmental engineeringEngineeringAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesElectrochemical Analysis and ApplicationsAnalytical Chemistry and Sensors