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Amino Acid-Fabricated Glassy Carbon Electrode for Efficient Simultaneous Sensing of Zinc(II), Cadmium(II), Copper(II), and Mercury(II) Ions
Author(s) -
Tayyaba Kokab,
Afzal Shah,
Faiza Jan Iftikhar,
Jan Nisar,
Mohammad Salim Akhter,
Sher Bahadar Khan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.9b03189
Subject(s) - metal ions in aqueous solution , alanine , electrochemistry , detection limit , chemistry , zinc , glassy carbon , cyclic voltammetry , voltammetry , cadmium , copper , anodic stripping voltammetry , dielectric spectroscopy , electrode , inorganic chemistry , metal , amino acid , analytical chemistry (journal) , chromatography , organic chemistry , biochemistry
Herein, we present a greener approach to achieve an ultrasensitive, selective, and viable sensor engineered by amino acids as a recognition layer for simultaneous electrochemical sensing of toxic heavy metals (HMs). Electrochemical techniques like electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS), cyclic voltammetry (CV), and square-wave anodic stripping voltammetry (SWASV) were applied to demonstrate sensing capabilities of the designed analytical tool. The comparative results of different amino acids demonstrate alanine's superior performance with a well-resolved and enhanced current signal for target metal ions due to strong complexation of its functional moieties. The working conditions for alanine-modified GCE were optimized by investigating the effect of alanine concentration, different supporting electrolytes, pH values, accumulation potentials, and time. The limits of detection for Zn 2+ , Cd 2+ , Cu 2+ , and Hg 2+ were found to be 8.92, 5.77, 3.01, and 5.89 pM, respectively. The alanine-modified electrode revealed absolute discrimination ability, stability, and ultrasensitivity toward metal ions even in the presence of multifold interfering species. Likewise, greener modifier-designed electrodes possessed remarkable electrocatalytic activity, cost affordability, reproducibility, and applicability for picomolar level detection of HM ions in real water sample matrixes. Theoretical calculations for the HM-amino acid interaction also support a significantly improved mediator role of the alanine modifier that is consistent with the experimental findings.

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