Affiliation:
1. Functional Interfaces Research Group, Institute of Materials and Environmental Chemistry, Research Centre for Natural
Sciences, Budapest, Hungary
2. Doctoral School on Materials Science and Technologies, Óbuda University, Faculty
of Light Industry and Environmental Engineering, Budapest, Hungary
Abstract
Abstract:
High levels of metallic ions, particularly heavy metals, can cause serious damage not only to
public health but to the whole ecosystem. Therefore, rapid and precise detection and monitoring of heavy
metals have become vital. The detection of heavy metals in water using conventional monitoring approaches
based on physicochemical and analytical procedures, e.g., inductively coupled plasma combined
with atomic absorption spectroscopy, X-ray fluorescence, instrumental neutron activation analysis, etc.,
has been immensely utilized. However, the sophisticated sample preparation and evaluation procedures
for most of the mentioned methods are time- and labor-intensive, and economically more favorable detection
approaches, e.g., sensors and lab-on-a-chip techniques, are being developed. Chemical sensors (electrochemical,
optical, and piezogravimetric) with different sensing platforms (nanostructures, biological,
polymeric, and macrocyclic) have been considered to be the most promising ones, owing to their strong
adsorption of target elements, fast electron transfer kinetics, and biocompatibility, which are very apt for
sensing applications. The combination of electrochemical, optical, and piezogravimetric techniques with
nanomaterials has enhanced the sensitivity, limit of detection, and robustness of the chemosensors. Following
this perspective, this review highlights surface modification platforms of sensors that enhance the
detection properties (sensitivity, selectivity, limit of detection, and linear range) of the proposed devices,
including nanostructures, biological networks, polymers, and macrocycles with a special emphasis on
calixarenes/resorcinarenes oligomers. The capabilities, limitations, and prospect assessments of the covered
techniques in detection and monitoring have been highlighted.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.