4.8 Article

Practical Strategy for Arsenic(III) Electroanalysis without Modifier in Natural Water: Triggered by Iron Group Ions in Solution

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 95, Issue 8, Pages 4104-4112

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c04935

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A practical strategy for detecting trace-level As(III) in natural water without any modifiers using soluble Fe3+ as a trigger is reported. The method achieves an actual detection limit of 1 ppb and a sensitivity of 0.296 mu A ppb(-1) with excellent stability. The codeposition mechanism of Fe3+ preferentially depositing as Fe-0 is confirmed, which facilitates the adsorption of As(III) and H+ on the electrode surface and the formation of AsH3.
Significant progress has been made in nanomaterialmodified electrodes for highly efficient electroanalysis of arsenic(III) (As(III)). However, the modifiers prepared using some physical methods may easily fall off, and active sites are not uniform, causing the potential instability of the modified electrode. This work first reports a promising practical strategy without any modifiers via utilizing only soluble Fe3+ as a trigger to detect trace-level As(III) in natural water. This method reaches an actual detection limit of 1 ppb on bare glassy carbon electrodes and a sensitivity of 0.296 mu A ppb(-1) with excellent stability. Kinetic simulations and experimental evidence confirm the codeposition mechanism that Fe3+ is preferentially deposited as Fe-0, which are active sites to adsorb As(III) and H+ on the electrode surface. This facilitates the formation of AsH3, which could further react with Fe2+ to produce more As-0 and Fe-0. Meanwhile, the produced Fe-0 can also accelerate the efficient enrichment of As0. Remarkably, the proposed sensing mechanism is a general rule for the electroanalysis of As(III) that is triggered by iron group ions (Fe2+, Fe3+, Co2+, and Ni2+). The interference analysis of coexisting ions (Cu2+, Zn2+, Al3+, Hg2+, Cd2+, Pb2+, SO42-, NO3-, Cl-, and F-) indicates that only Cu2+, Pb2+, and F- showed inhibitory effects on As(III) due to the competition of active sites. Surprisingly, adding iron power effectively eliminates the interference of Cu2+ in natural water, achieving a higher sensitivity for 1-15 ppb As(III) (0.487 mu A ppb(-1)). This study provides effective solutions to overcome the potential instability of modified electrodes and offers a practical sensing platform for analyzing other heavy-metal anions.

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