Nitrogen-Doped Carbon Quantum Dot Nanoparticle Fluorescent Probes for Quantification of Ni(II) in Environmental Water Samples Collected using an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
de Almeida, João Paulo; Rodrigo Silva, Jackson; Sabino-Júnior, José Roberto; Carvalho, Vinicius A.; Toito Suarez, Willian; Erenas Rodríguez, Miguel María; Capitán Vallvey, Luis Fermín; Oliveira, Severino Carlos; dos Santos, Vagner BezerraEditorial
American Chemical Society
Materia
nanoparticles digital image nickel
Fecha
2025-09-19Referencia bibliográfica
de Almeida, J. P., Silva, J. R., Sabino-Júnior, J. R., Carvalho, V. A., Suarez, W. T., Erenas, M. M., Capitán-Vallvey, L. F., Oliveira, S. C., & dos Santos, V. B. (2025). Nitrogen-doped carbon quantum dot nanoparticle fluorescent probes for quantification of Ni(II) in environmental water samples collected using an unmanned aerial vehicle. ACS Applied Nano Materials, acsanm.5c03254. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.5c03254
Patrocinador
Fundação de Amparo à Ciência e Tecnologia de Pernambuco (FACEPE) (APQ-0942-1.06/22, APQ-0413-1.06/21, APQ-1050-1.06/24); Conselho Nacional de Ciência e Tecnologia (CNPQ) (421147/2018-0, 441109/2023-3, 308422/2023-6, 308848/2025-0)Resumen
In this work, an innovative and low-cost method was developed to quantify Ni(II) ions in environmental water samples based on fluorescence digital images from quantum dots using a smartphone as a detector. The method is based on the fluorescence quenching of nitrogen-doped carbon dots (N,C-QDs) when nickel reacts with dimethylglyoxime. The fluorescence emission from nanoparticles is captured by a smartphone coupled to a portable UV-LED chamber. An analytical curve was developed to detect Ni(II), and a concentration range from 10.9 to 275.0 μg L–1 with detection and quantification limits of 2.7 and 8.3 μg L–1, respectively. Thus, the method attempted the recommended values of Ni(II) according to agencies such USEPA (100 μg L–1), WHO (70 μg L–1), EFSA (20 μg L–1), and CONAMA (25 μg L–1) for fresh waters. Moreover, to evaluate the accuracy and precision of the proposed method, a reference method based on inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectrometry was used for comparison purposes. The results obtained by both methods showed no differences at a 95% confidence level (n = 3) when employing the F-test and T-test statistical methods. Furthermore, the fluorescence digital image-based (FDIB) method was highly selective for Ni(II) ions with an interference response lower than 5.0%, and it presented a good recovery from 93.6 to 109.0%. Moreover, aiming to develop a high-level automation method for environmental monitoring, an adapted unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) controlled by a smartphone via Wi-Fi, equipped with a micropump and a miniaturized solenoid valve powered by a solar energy system, was developed. This innovation reduced collection time, allowed access to hard-to-reach locations, and reduced sampling costs by using renewable energy, thus being environmentally friendly. This new analytical method using N,C-QDs-FDIB-UAV proposed for monitoring Ni(II) in environmental water samples offers numerous advantages, such as high sensitivity, selectivity supplied by nanoparticle probe together the portability, low cost, autonomous, and an eco-friendly methodology obtained from the UAV system.





