4.6 Article

A Novel Paper-Based Reagentless Dual Functional Soil Test to Instantly Detect Phosphate Infield

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 22, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22228803

Keywords

cyclic voltammetry; Mehlich-3 extractant; molybdate ions; plant-available phosphorus; screen-printed electrodes

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) [RGPIN-2014-4100]
  2. Ministry of Economic Development, Job Creation, and Trade (MEDJCT) Early Researchers Award (ERA) [ER17-13-052]

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This study proposes a novel paper-based electrochemical soil phosphate sensor that offers a fast, portable, low-cost, and reliable method for extracting and detecting phosphate in soil.
Soil tests for plant-available phosphorus (P) are suggested to provide offsite P analysis required to monitor P fertilizer application and reduce P losses to downstream water. However, procedural and cost limitations of current soil phosphate tests have restricted their widespread use and have made them accessible only in laboratories. This study proposes a novel paper-based reagentless electrochemical soil phosphate sensor to extract and detect soil phosphate using an inexpensive and simple approach. In this test, concentrated Mehlich-3 and molybdate ions were impregnated in filter paper, which served as the phosphate extraction and reaction zone, and was followed by electrochemical detection using cyclic voltammetry signals. Soil samples from 22 sampling sites were used to validate this method against inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy (ICP) soil phosphate tests. Regression and correlation analyses showed a significant relationship between phosphate determinations by ICP and the proposed method, delivering a correlation coefficient, r, of 0.98 and a correlation slope of 1.02. The proposed approach provided a fast, portable, low-cost, accessible, reliable, and single-step test to extract and detect phosphate simultaneously with minimum waste (0.5 mL per sample), which made phosphate characterization possible in the field.

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