4.7 Article

Simple, rapid, portable and quantitative sensing of Fe3+ ions via analyte-triggered redox reactions mediating Tyndall effect enhancement of Au nanoparticles

Journal

MICROCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 174, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.microc.2021.107075

Keywords

Point-of-care nanosensor; Instrument-free quantitative measurement; Colorimetric signaling; Tyndall effect; Iron (III) ion

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21874032, 21765007, 21765005]
  2. Guangxi Key Research Project [GuikeAB17129003]
  3. Guangxi Sci-ence Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars [2018GXNSFFA281002]
  4. Central Government-Guided Local Science and Technology Development Project
  5. Guangxi Graduate Education Innovation Plan [YCSW2020170]

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This study introduces a new nanosensing method for colorimetric detection of Fe3+ ions utilizing the Tyndall effect. By using colloidal Au nanoparticles and TMB as recognition reagent, the nanosensor offers high sensitivity, selectivity, and portability, with a significant improvement in detection sensitivity and a reduction in nanoprobe consumption per assay. The accuracy and practicality of the method are validated in complex samples, making it a promising tool for Fe3+ analysis.
This study initially describes a new nanosensing method for colorimetric detection of iron (III) (Fe3+) ions with high sensitivity and selectivity using one of the most basic optical properties of colloids (namely the Tyndall effect, TE). It adopts colloidal Au nanoparticles (AuNPs) prepared by sodium citrate reduction as the light scattering signaling probes, and 3,3',5,5' -tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) as recognition reagent. In the presence of Fe3+ ions, the TMB can be oxidized to its positively-charged product (TMBox) to induce the aggregation of the negatively-charged AuNP via electrostatic adsorption, leading to a significant enhancement in their TE which positively relies on the analyte concentration in the sample. The results demonstrate that this nanosensor is simple, rapid, low-cost, and portable, because it takes just 15 min to complete one assay run where only a laser pointer pen is utilized as the hand-held light source to stimulate the TE creation and a smartphone as the mobile quantitative TE reader. In particular, it can linearly detect the Fe3+ in a level range from 0.5 to 64 mu M with a detection limit of similar to 370 nM, offering a similar to 37-fold improvement in sensitivity but with similar to 9 times reduction in nanoprobe consumption per assay in comparison with the most common AuNP-based naked-eye method with surface plasmon resonance signaling strategy. Its accuracy and practicability are additionally validated by determining Fe3+ ions in real complex samples including tap water, commercially-available drinking water and human serum with acceptable recovery results between 85.96 and 115.52%. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of designing an equipment-free quantitative visual assay for the Fe3+ analysis by taking the advantage of the TE of colloids like AuNP tested herein.

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