Detection of trace amounts of insoluble pharmaceuticals in water by extraction and SERS measurements in a microfluidic flow regime.


Journal

The Analyst
ISSN: 1364-5528
Titre abrégé: Analyst
Pays: England
ID NLM: 0372652

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
07 Jun 2021
Historique:
pubmed: 7 5 2021
medline: 4 6 2021
entrez: 6 5 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Detection of trace amounts of poorly water-soluble pharmaceuticals or related (bio)solutions represents a key challenge in environment protection and clinical diagnostics. However, this task is complicated by low concentrations of pharmaceuticals, complex sample matrices, and sophisticated sample preparative routes. In this work, we present an alternative approach on the basis of an on-line flow extraction procedure and SERS measurements performed in a microfluidic regime. The advantages of our approach were demonstrated using ibuprofen (Ibu), which is considered as a common pharmaceutical contaminant in wastewater and should be monitored in various bioliquids. The extraction of Ibu from water to the dichloromethane phase was performed with an optimized microfluidic mixer architecture. As SERS tags, lipophilic functionalized gold multibranched nanoparticles (AuMs) were added to the organic phase. After microfluidic extraction, Ibu was captured by the functionalized AuM surface and recognized by on-line SERS measurements with up to 10-8 M detection limit. The main advantages of the proposed approach can be regarded as its simplicity, lack of need for preliminary sample preparation, high reliability, the absence of sample pretreatment, and low detection limits.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33955973
doi: 10.1039/d0an02360d
doi:

Substances chimiques

Pharmaceutical Preparations 0
Water 059QF0KO0R
Gold 7440-57-5

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

3686-3696

Auteurs

Vasilii Burtsev (V)

Department of Solid State Engineering, Institute of Chemical Technology, 16628 Prague, Czech Republic. lyutakoo@vscht.cz.

Mariia Erzina (M)

Department of Solid State Engineering, Institute of Chemical Technology, 16628 Prague, Czech Republic. lyutakoo@vscht.cz and Research School of Chemistry and Applied Biomedical Sciences, Tomsk Polytechnic University, Russian Federation.

Olga Guselnikova (O)

Department of Solid State Engineering, Institute of Chemical Technology, 16628 Prague, Czech Republic. lyutakoo@vscht.cz and Research School of Chemistry and Applied Biomedical Sciences, Tomsk Polytechnic University, Russian Federation.

Elena Miliutina (E)

Department of Solid State Engineering, Institute of Chemical Technology, 16628 Prague, Czech Republic. lyutakoo@vscht.cz and Research School of Chemistry and Applied Biomedical Sciences, Tomsk Polytechnic University, Russian Federation.

Yevgeniya Kalachyova (Y)

Department of Solid State Engineering, Institute of Chemical Technology, 16628 Prague, Czech Republic. lyutakoo@vscht.cz.

Vaclav Svorcik (V)

Department of Solid State Engineering, Institute of Chemical Technology, 16628 Prague, Czech Republic. lyutakoo@vscht.cz.

Oleksiy Lyutakov (O)

Department of Solid State Engineering, Institute of Chemical Technology, 16628 Prague, Czech Republic. lyutakoo@vscht.cz and Research School of Chemistry and Applied Biomedical Sciences, Tomsk Polytechnic University, Russian Federation.

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Classifications MeSH