Sustainable Chemistry (Aug 2021)

A Highly Selective Economical Sensor for 4-Nitrophenol

  • Thuy Le,
  • Yusuf Khan,
  • Nicholas Speller,
  • Mujeebat Bashiru,
  • Samantha Macchi,
  • Isiah Warner,
  • Noureen Siraj

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/suschem2030028
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 506 – 520

Abstract

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Herein, an inexpensive commercially available sensor is presented for the detection of 4-nitrophenol (4NP) pollutant. Sodium fluorescein (NaFl) is used as a sensor to detect trace amounts of 4NP in acetonitrile (MeCN). The photophysical properties of NaFl were studied in two different solvents, MeCN (aprotic) and water (protic), with varying concentrations of different nitroaromatics using UV-visible absorption and fluorescence spectrophotometry. In an aqueous medium, photophysical properties of NaFl did not change in the presence of nitroaromatics. However, examination of the photodynamics in MeCN demonstrated that NaFl is extremely sensitive to 4NP (limit of detection: 0.29 µg/mL). This extreme specificity of NaFl towards 4NP when dissolved in MeCN, as compared to other nitroaromatics, is attributed to hydrogen bonding of 4NP with NaFl in the absence of water, resulting in both static and dynamic quenching processes. Thus, NaFl is demonstrated as a simple, inexpensive, sensitive, and robust optical turn off sensor for 4NP.

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