RESUMO
The development of stable fluorescent sensors for toxic pollutants and drugs is meaningful to the environment and public health. In this work, nitrogen-doped graphene quantum dots (N-GQDs) were facially synthesized by a one-step hydrothermal method using soluble starch and l-arginine as carbon and nitrogen sources in pure water at 190 °C for 4 h. The as-synthesized N-GQDs were well characterized and displayed blue fluorescence emission at 445 nm with excellent pH stability, salt tolerance, thermostability, photobleaching resistance and reproducibility. Moreover, N-GQDs could serve as an "on-off" sensor for selective detection of Cr(vi) and folic acid with low detection limit (0.80 and 2.1 µM), good linear correlation over wide linear range (0-50 µM and 0-200 µM) as well as short response time (<10 s). The practical applications of N-GQDs for Cr(vi) and folic acid detection in actual samples were further investigated and showed acceptable recoveries (92-105%) with relative standard deviations less than 5%. These results indicated that this N-GQDs-based sensor could be a potential alternative for Cr(vi) and folic acid detection in the fields of environmental monitoring and drug analysis.
RESUMO
In this work, a 2-(2'-hydroxyphenyl)benzimidazole derived fluorescent probe, 2-(2'-hydroxy-4'-aminophenyl)benzimidazole (4-AHBI), was synthesized and its fluorescent behavior toward triphosgene were evaluated. The results showed that 4-AHBI exhibited high sensitivity (limit of detection, 0.08 nM) and excellent selectivity for triphosgene over other acyl chlorides including phosgene in CH2Cl2 solution. Moreover, 4-AHBI loaded test strips were prepared for the practical sensing of triphosgene.