4.6 Article

Ultrasensitive Picomolar Detection of Aqueous Acids in Microscale Fluorescent Droplets

Journal

ACS SENSORS
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages 245-252

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.1c02076

Keywords

droplets; acid; fluorescence; partition; octanol; water

Funding

  1. Deutche Forschungsgemeinschaft [245845833]
  2. NSERC [463990-2015]
  3. Canada Research Chairs program

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This study presents a fluorescent-droplet-based acid-sensing scheme with detection limits below 100 pM for weak acids, demonstrating excellent sensing performance. Interactions with the sensor dye are likely responsible for the enhanced equilibrium partitioning observed.
We report on a fluorescent-droplet-based acid-sensing scheme that allows limits of detection below 100 pM for weak acids. The concept is based on a strong partitioning of acid from an aqueous phase into octanol droplets. Using salicylic acid as a demonstration, we show that at a high concentration, the acid partitions into the organic phase by a factor of 260, which is approximately consistent with literature values. However, at lower concentrations, we obtain a partition coefficient as high as 10(6), which is partly responsible for the excellent sensing performance. The enhanced equilibrium partitioning is likely due to the interaction of the dissociated acid phase with the sensor dye employed for this work. The effect of droplet size was determined, after which we derived a simple model to predict the time dependence of the color change as a function of droplet size. This work shows that color-change fluorescent-droplet-based detection is a promising avenue that can lead to exceptional sensing performance from an aqueous analyte.

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