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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Food & Water Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Ionic Liquid-Assisted Thermal Evaporation of Bimetallic Ag–Au Nanoparticle Films as a Highly Reproducible SERS Substrate for Sensitive Nanoplastic Detection in Complex Environments

Analytical Chemistry 2024 34 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Rafael Villamil Carreón, Rafael Villamil Carreón, Rafael Villamil Carreón, Rafael Villamil Carreón, José Juan Gervacio-Arciniega, José Juan Gervacio-Arciniega, Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Orlando Cortázar-Martínez, Laura Rosa, Laura Rosa, Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Siva Kumar Krishnan, Laura Rosa, José Juan Gervacio-Arciniega, José Juan Gervacio-Arciniega, José Juan Gervacio-Arciniega, José Juan Gervacio-Arciniega, Siva Kumar Krishnan, Siva Kumar Krishnan, Siva Kumar Krishnan, Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández Ana G. Rodríguez‐Hernández

Summary

Scientists developed a highly sensitive sensor using silver-gold nanoparticle films that can detect tiny PET nanoplastics in complex liquids like tap water, lake water, milk, and wine. The sensor could identify nanoplastics at concentrations as low as 1 microgram per milliliter using a light-based technique called SERS. This kind of detection tool is important for monitoring nanoplastic contamination in food and drinking water to better understand human exposure levels.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Nanoplastic particles are emerging as an important class of environmental pollutants in the atmosphere that have adverse effects on our ecosystems and human health. While many methods have been developed to quantitatively detect nanoplastics; however, sensitive detection at low concentrations in a complex environment remains elusive. Herein, we demonstrate a greener method to fabricate a surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) substrate consisting of self-assembled plasmonic Ag-Au bimetallic nanoparticle (NP) films for quantitative SERS detection of nanoplastics in complex media. The self-assembly of Ag-Au bimetallic NPs was achieved through thermal evaporation onto a vapor-phase compatible ionic liquid based on deep eutectic solvent over the growth substrate. The finite-difference time-domain simulation revealed that the localized field enhancement is strong in the gaps, which generate uniform SERS "hotspots" in the obtained substrate. Benefiting from highly accessible SERS "hotspots" at the gaps, the SERS substrate exhibits excellent sensitivity for detecting crystal violet with a limit of detection (LOD) as low as 10<sup>-14</sup> M and excellent reproducibility (RSD of 5.8%). The SERS substrate is capable of detecting PET nanoplastics with LOD as low as 1 μg/mL and about 100 μg/mL in real samples such as tap water, lake water, diluted milk, and wine. Moreover, we also validated the feasibility of the designed SERS substrate for the practical detection of PET nanoplastics collected from commercial drinking water bottles, and it showed great potential applications for sensitive detection in actual environments.

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