4.7 Article

Cu2+-Triggered Carbon Dots with Synchronous Response of Dual Emission for Ultrasensitive Ratiometric Fluorescence Determination of Thiophanate-Methyl Residues

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 67, Issue 45, Pages 12576-12583

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b04720

Keywords

food safety; ratiometric fluorescence; carbon dots; nanosensor; pesticide; thiophanate-methyl

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31801628]
  2. Social Development Grant of Shaanxi Province [2018SF-401]

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Copper ion (Cu2+)-triggered carbon dots (CDs/Cu) with dual emissions were utilized to develop a ratiometric fluorescence sensor for ultrasensitive detection of inert thiophanate-methyl (TM). TM could be recognized by CDs/Cu through pi-pi stacking and could chelate Cu2+ of CDs/Cu through metal ion coordination, inducing synchronous fluoresent quenching of the dual emission of CDs/Cu based on the excited state intramolecular proton transfer and the ligand-to-metal charge transfer. The fluorescence ratio of CDs/Cu (F-416/F-481) linearly responded in a TM concentration of 0.10-20.00 mu mol/L with an ultralow limit of detection of 2.90 X 10(-6) mu mol/L. A synchronous response of the ratiometric sensor enhanced the specificity toward TM and presented remarkable capability of anti-interference in complex matrices. The sensor exhibited satifactory accuracy and precision for practical applications with recoveries of 88.33-101.09% and relative standard deviations of 1.61-5.06%, demonstrating an ultrasensitive ratiometric fluorescent nanosensor for detecting pesticides residues in complex matrices.

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