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1.
RSC Adv ; 14(8): 5012-5021, 2024 Feb 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38332781

ABSTRACT

Carbon dots (CDs) are valued for their biocompatibility, easy fabrication, and distinct optical characteristics. The current study examines using whey to fabricate CDs using the hydrothermal method. When stimulated at 350 nm, the synthetic CDs emitted blue light at 423 nm and revealed a selective response to ferric ion (Fe3+) in actual samples with great sensitivity, making them a suitable probe for assessing Fe3+ ions. The produced carbon dots demonstrated great photostability, high sensitivity, and outstanding biocompatibility. The findings showed that Fe3+ ions could be quickly, sensitively, and extremely selectively detected in an aqueous solution of carbon dots, with a revealing limit of 0.409 µM in the linear range of 0-180 µM. Interestingly, this recognition boundary is far inferior to the WHO-recommended threshold of 0.77 µM. Two metric tools which were AGREE and the ComplexGAPI were also used to evaluate the method's greenness. The evaluation confirmed its superior environmental friendliness.

2.
Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ; 291: 122340, 2023 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36702082

ABSTRACT

In this work, dual-template molecularly imprinted polymer surfaces imprinted on blue fluorescent Cr-based MOF (Cr-MOF) functionalized with yellow emissive carbon dots (Y-CDs) were prepared using l-ascorbic acid (AA) and uric acid (UA) as templates for simultaneous selective recognition of AA and UA. The as-prepared nanocomposite probe (Y-CDs/Cr-MOF@MIP) contains two recognition site cavities and emits a dual well-resolved fluorescence spectra when excited at 390 nm; blue emission (λem 450 nm) is due to Cr-MOF, and yellow emission (λem 560 nm) is due to Y-CDs. The yellow fluorescence emission of Y-CDs was quenched upon the addition of ascorbic acid, while Cr-MOF's emission remained unaffected. In the same way, the blue fluorescence emission of the Cr-MOFs was quenched in the presence of uric acid, while the yellow emission remained constant. Both emissions were quenched in a sample containing both AA and UA. This can be exploited to design a dual-template biosensor to detect UA and AA simultaneously. The Y-CDs/Cr-MOF@MIP sensor displayed a dynamic linear response for AA in the range 25.0 µM - 425.0 µM with a detection limit of 1.30 µM, and for UA in the range 25.0 µM - 425.0 µM with a detection limit of 1.10 µM. The dual-target probe Y-CDs/Cr-MOF@MIP was highly selective and sensitive for the detection of UA and AA in human urine samples due to the selectivity of the two recognition sites.


Subject(s)
Metal-Organic Frameworks , Molecular Imprinting , Quantum Dots , Humans , Polymers , Uric Acid/urine , Carbon , Ascorbic Acid , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Fluorescent Dyes , Limit of Detection
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