4.7 Review

Progress in the materials for optical detection of arsenic in water

Journal

TRAC-TRENDS IN ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 110, Issue -, Pages 97-115

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.trac.2018.10.008

Keywords

Arsenic; Optical detection; Materials; Imaging techniques; Biosensors; Water analysis

Funding

  1. CSIO
  2. Department of Science & Technology (DST) [GAP 375]
  3. IUSSTF-WARI
  4. DST INSPIRE fellowship program
  5. United States Environmental Protection Agency WINSSS

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Arsenic poisoning of water resources has been of universal concern because of its serious health impact and on the ecosystem. As such, several efforts have been made on promising optical detection of arsenic utilizing various transduction platforms. However, the substantial role of sensor material cannot be ignored in the design of cost-effective, environment-friendly, and user acceptable sensor systems for onsite/in-field application. The goal is to employ sensor materials that enable detection of arsenic with high sensitivity, selectivity, reproducibility, and stability. In the present review, we have covered and critically deliberated upon the progress made over 2013-2018 in sensor materials, including colorimetric dyes, organic fluorophores, nanostructures (metal, carbon, semiconductor, metal oxides, etc.), and bioreceptors (aptamers, peptides, whole cells, etc.), for optical detection of arsenic in water. The possible integration of microfluidics/paper fluidics and imaging with existing optical sensor materials to realize a user friendly system for varied settings is also discussed. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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