scholarly journals Targeted On-Demand Screening of Pesticide Panel in Soil Runoff

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vikram Narayanan Dhamu ◽  
Suhashine Sukumar ◽  
Crisvin Sajee Kadambathil ◽  
Sriram Muthukumar ◽  
Shalini Prasad

Using pesticides is a common agricultural and horticultural practice to serve as a control against weeds, fungi, and insects in plant systems. The application of these chemical agents is usually by spraying them on the crop or plant. However, this methodology is not highly directional, and so only a fraction of the pesticide actually adsorbs onto the plant, and the rest seeps through into the soil base contaminating its composition and eventually leaching into groundwater sources. Electrochemical sensors which are more practical for in situ analysis used for pesticide detection in soil runoff systems are still in dearth, while the ones published in the literature are attributed with complex sensor modification/functionalization and preprocessing of samples. Hence, in this work, we present a highly intuitive electroanalytical sensor approach toward rapid (10 min), on-demand screening of commonly used pesticides—glyphosate and atrazine—in soil runoff. The proposed sensor functions based on the affinity biosensing mechanism driven via thiol cross-linker and antibody receptors that holistically behaves as a recognition immunoassay stack that is specific and sensitive to track test pesticide analytes. Then, this developed sensor is integrated further to create a pesticide-sensing ecosystem using a front-end field-deployable smart device. The method put forward in this work is compared and validated against a standard laboratory potentiostat instrument to determine efficacy, feasibility, and robustness for a point-of-use (PoU) setting yielding LoD levels of 0.001 ng/ml for atrazine and 1 ng/ml for glyphosate. Also, the ML model integration resulted in an accurate prediction rate of ≈80% in real soil samples. Therefore, a universal pesticide screening analytical device is designed, fabricated, and tested for pesticide assessment in real soil runoff samples.

2002 ◽  
Vol 74 (12) ◽  
pp. 2271-2276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Holger Löwe ◽  
Volker Hessel ◽  
A. Mueller

Microreactors as a no el concept in chemical technology enable the introduction of new reaction procedures in chemistry, pharmaceutical industry, and molecular biology. Miniaturized reaction systems offer many exceptional technical advantages for a large number of applications. The large surface-to-volume ratio of miniaturized fluid components allows for significantly enhanced process control and heat management. Moreover, the unique possibilities of microchemical systems pave the way to a distributed point-of-use and on-demand production of extremely harmful and toxic substances.On the other side of the coin,miniaturization of complete set-ups for chemical syntheses to a suitcase or even to a shoe-box size opens several possibilities to possibly use them as tools for terrorist attacks and to facilitate the clandestine manufacture of chemical agents. Microfabrication techniques are common and allow the machining of special materials (e.g., high-alloyed steel, titanium, ceramics, or glass). Meanwhile, micromachining techniques are available anywhere in the world. Therefore, these techniques are no longer unique nor proprietary and they cannot pre ent construction or distribution of microreaction systems by people with allegiance to a terrorist organization.


Author(s):  
Jilin Zheng ◽  
Peng Zhao ◽  
Shiying Zhou ◽  
Sha Chen ◽  
Yi Liang ◽  
...  

Integrating metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) of different components or structures together and exploiting them as electrochemical sensors for electrochemical sensing have aroused great interest. And the incorporation of noble metals with...


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan O'Riordan ◽  
Ian Seymour ◽  
Aidan Murphy ◽  
Ivan O'Connell

This work describes a flexible and portable data acquisition system that has been developed to interface to nano and ultra-micro scale electrochemical sensors at the point of use. It can perform a range of voltammetric tests, including Cyclic Voltammetry, Square Wave Voltammetry and Generator Collector Voltammetery. The data acquisition system interfaces to a smartphone, operates from a rechargeable battery and is of suitable form factor to ensure that it’s fully portable. By utilising commercially available components, this system has been developed to lower the barrier for entry for the development of emerging portable electrochemical sensing technologies at micro and nano scale. To show the full range of functionality of the system, a use case involving river water quality monitoring is presented through generation of a calibration curve, using a recently developed Tyndall National Institute ultra-microband electrochemical sensor, for the detection of dissolved oxygen in river water.


2012 ◽  
Vol 86 ◽  
pp. 40-50
Author(s):  
Sirinrath Sirivisoot ◽  
Thomas J. Webster

Although improvements have been made in implant design to increase bone formation and promote successful osseointegration using nanotechnology, the clinical diagnosis of early bone growth surrounding implants remains problematic. The development of a device allowing doctors to monitor the healing cascade and to diagnose potential infection or inflammation is necessary. Biological detection can be examined by the electrochemical analysis of electron transfer (or redox) reactions of extracellular matrix proteins involved in bone deposition and resorption. The use of nanomaterials as signal amplifiers in electrochemical sensors has greatly improved the sensitivity of detection. Nanotechnology-enabled electrochemical sensors that can be placed on the implant surface itself show promise as self-diagnosing devices in situ, possibly to detect new bone growth surrounding the implant and other cellular events to ensure implant success.


Science ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 361 (6403) ◽  
pp. 690-693 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebeca Ribeiro-Palau ◽  
Changjian Zhang ◽  
Kenji Watanabe ◽  
Takashi Taniguchi ◽  
James Hone ◽  
...  

In heterostructures of two-dimensional materials, electronic properties can vary dramatically with relative interlayer angle. This effect makes it theoretically possible to realize a new class of twistable electronics in which properties can be manipulated on demand by means of rotation. We demonstrate a device architecture in which a layered heterostructure can be dynamically twisted in situ. We study graphene encapsulated by boron nitride, where, at small rotation angles, the device characteristics are dominated by coupling to a long-wavelength moiré superlattice. The ability to investigate arbitrary rotation angle in a single device reveals features of the optical, mechanical, and electronic response in this system not captured in static rotation studies. Our results establish the capability to fabricate twistable electronic devices with dynamically tunable properties.


2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 1181-1189 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Xu ◽  
Erick Foster ◽  
Chaoxiong Ma ◽  
Paul W. Bohn

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