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Monitoring bisphenol A and its biodegradation in water using a fluorescent molecularly imprinted chemosensor.

Wu, Ya-Ting ; Liu, Yan-Jie ; Gao, Xia ; Gao, Kai-Chun ; Xia, Hu ; Luo, Mi-Fang ; Wang, Xue-Juan ; Ye, Lei LU orcid ; Shi, Yun and Lu, Bin (2015) In Chemosphere 119. p.515-523
Abstract
In this paper, we present a simple and rapid method for monitoring bisphenol A (BPA) and its biodegradation in environmental water using a fluorescent molecularly imprinted polymer chemosensor (fMIPcs). A fluorescent molecularly imprinted polymer (fMIP) was first synthesized by precipitation polymerization method using BPA as template, dansyl methacrylate as functional monomer. Then a fMIPcs was constructed by combining the fMIP with a fluorescent microplate reader. The fMIPcs displayed selective, concentration-dependent fluorescence quenching in response to BPA in water even in the existence of interferences, thereby allowing reliable high through-put quantification of BPA via simple fluorescence measurements. The fMIPcs was able to... (More)
In this paper, we present a simple and rapid method for monitoring bisphenol A (BPA) and its biodegradation in environmental water using a fluorescent molecularly imprinted polymer chemosensor (fMIPcs). A fluorescent molecularly imprinted polymer (fMIP) was first synthesized by precipitation polymerization method using BPA as template, dansyl methacrylate as functional monomer. Then a fMIPcs was constructed by combining the fMIP with a fluorescent microplate reader. The fMIPcs displayed selective, concentration-dependent fluorescence quenching in response to BPA in water even in the existence of interferences, thereby allowing reliable high through-put quantification of BPA via simple fluorescence measurements. The fMIPcs was able to directly quantify BPA (from 10 to 2000μgL(-1)) in different environmental water samples (distilled water, distilled water containing heavy metals and humic acid, tap water, and river water) with high accuracy, and to monitor BPA biodegradation in real-time. Using the fMIPcs, it was possible to achieve fast analytical results with lower limit of detection for BPA (3μgL(-1)) from smaller sample volume (250μL), which are superior to many relevant methods reported in the literature. Moreover, BPA levels and biodegradation rates measured by fMIPcs are comparable to the instrument-based method (HPLC). The fMIPcs developed in this work offers a new solution for simple, rapid, accurate and high through-put BPA quantification, and makes it possible to monitor BPA biodegradation in real time. (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Chemosphere
volume
119
pages
515 - 523
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • pmid:25112577
  • wos:000347739600071
  • scopus:84919740672
  • pmid:25112577
ISSN
1879-1298
DOI
10.1016/j.chemosphere.2014.07.017
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
09ead7ab-2178-4c30-bd02-fe049881c336 (old id 4614952)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:20:55
date last changed
2022-04-04 17:12:09
@article{09ead7ab-2178-4c30-bd02-fe049881c336,
  abstract     = {{In this paper, we present a simple and rapid method for monitoring bisphenol A (BPA) and its biodegradation in environmental water using a fluorescent molecularly imprinted polymer chemosensor (fMIPcs). A fluorescent molecularly imprinted polymer (fMIP) was first synthesized by precipitation polymerization method using BPA as template, dansyl methacrylate as functional monomer. Then a fMIPcs was constructed by combining the fMIP with a fluorescent microplate reader. The fMIPcs displayed selective, concentration-dependent fluorescence quenching in response to BPA in water even in the existence of interferences, thereby allowing reliable high through-put quantification of BPA via simple fluorescence measurements. The fMIPcs was able to directly quantify BPA (from 10 to 2000μgL(-1)) in different environmental water samples (distilled water, distilled water containing heavy metals and humic acid, tap water, and river water) with high accuracy, and to monitor BPA biodegradation in real-time. Using the fMIPcs, it was possible to achieve fast analytical results with lower limit of detection for BPA (3μgL(-1)) from smaller sample volume (250μL), which are superior to many relevant methods reported in the literature. Moreover, BPA levels and biodegradation rates measured by fMIPcs are comparable to the instrument-based method (HPLC). The fMIPcs developed in this work offers a new solution for simple, rapid, accurate and high through-put BPA quantification, and makes it possible to monitor BPA biodegradation in real time.}},
  author       = {{Wu, Ya-Ting and Liu, Yan-Jie and Gao, Xia and Gao, Kai-Chun and Xia, Hu and Luo, Mi-Fang and Wang, Xue-Juan and Ye, Lei and Shi, Yun and Lu, Bin}},
  issn         = {{1879-1298}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{515--523}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Chemosphere}},
  title        = {{Monitoring bisphenol A and its biodegradation in water using a fluorescent molecularly imprinted chemosensor.}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2014.07.017}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.chemosphere.2014.07.017}},
  volume       = {{119}},
  year         = {{2015}},
}