Dual-mode electrochemical and SERS detection of PFAS using functional porous substrate
Karolina Kukrálová, Elena Miliutina, Olga Guselnikova, Vasilii Burtsev, Tomáš Hrbek, Václav Švorčı́k, Oleksiy Lyutakov
Abstract
Human activity is the cause of the continuous and gradual grooving of environmental contaminants, where some released toxic and dangerous compounds cannot be degraded under natural conditions, resulting in a serious safety issue. Among them are the widely occurring water-soluble perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), sometimes called “forever chemicals” because of the impossibility of their natural degradation. Hence, a reliable, expressive, and simple method should be developed to monitor and eliminate the risks associated with these compounds. In this study, we propose a simple, express, and portable detection method for water-soluble fluoro-alkyl compounds (PFOA and GenX) using mutually complementary methods: electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). To implement our method, we developed special substrates based on porous silicon with a top-deposited plasmon-active Au layer by subsequently grafting –C 6 H 4 -NH 2 chemical moieties to provide surface affinity toward negatively charged water-soluble PFAS. Subsequent EIS utilization allows us to perform semiquantitative detection of PFOA and GenX up to 10 −10 M concentration because surface entrapping of PFAS leads to a significant increase in the electrode–electrolyte charge-transfer resistance. However, distinguishing by EIS whether even PFAS were entrapped was impossible, and thus the substrates were subsequently subjected to SERS measurements (allowed by surface plasmon activity due to the presence of a porous Au layer), clearly indicating the appearance of characteristic C–F vibration bands. • A dual approach for simple, express, and portable detection of PFAS is proposed. • The approach is based on mutually complementary methods: EIS and SERS. • The specially designed plasmon- and electrochemically active substrates were used. • Utilization of EIS allows detection of PFAS up to a concentration of 10 −10 M. • Subsequent SERS measurements enhance the detection reliability.