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Green Synthesis of Fluorescent Carbon Dots for Selective Detection of Tartrazine in Food Samples Hua Xu, Xiupei Yang, Gu Li, Chuan Zhao, and Xiangjun Liao J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 08 Jul 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 9, 2015
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
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Green Synthesis of Fluorescent Carbon Dots for Selective
2
Detection of Tartrazine in Food Samples
3
Hua Xu,† Xiupei Yang,* ,† Gu Li,† Chuan Zhao,† and Xiangjun Liao*,‡
4 5
†
College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, China West Normal University, Nanchong 637000, P.R. China
6 7
‡
Exposure and Biomonitoring Division, Health Canada, 50 Colombine Driveway, Ottawa, K1A 0K9 Canada
8
ABSTRACT: A simple, economical, and green method for the preparation of water-soluble,
9
high-fluorescent carbon quantum dots (C-dots) has been developed via hydrothermal process
10
using aloe as a carbon source. The synthesized C-dots were characterized by atomic force
11
microscope
12
spectrophotometer, UV-vis absorption spectra as well as fourier transform infrared
13
spectroscopy (FTIR). The results reveal that the as-prepared C-dots were spherical shape with
14
an average diameter of 5 nm and emit bright yellow photoluminescence (PL) with a quantum
15
yield of approximately 10.37%. The surface of the C-dots was rich in hydroxyl groups and
16
presented various merits including high fluorescent quantum yield, excellent photostability,
17
low toxicity and satisfactory solubility. Additionally, we found that one of the widely-used
18
synthetic food colorants, tartrazine, could result in a strong fluorescence quenching of the
19
C-dots through a static quenching process. The decrease of fluorescence intensity made it
20
possible to determine tartrazine in the linear range extending from 0.25 to 32.50 µM, This
21
observation was further successfully applied for the determination of tartrazine in food
22
samples collected from local markets, suggesting its great potential towards food routine
23
analysis. Results from our study may shed light on the production of fluorescent and
24
biocompatible nanocarbons due to our simple and environmental benign strategy to
25
synthesize C-dots in which aloe was used as a carbon source.
26
KEYWORDS: Carbon quantum dots, tartrazine, aloe, fluorescence quench
(AFM),
transmission
electron
microscopy
27
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(TEM),
fluorescence
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■ INTRODUCTION
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Tartrazine is one of the widely used synthetic food colorants that can be found in certain food
30
products such as candies, beverages, bakery products and dairy products.1,2 However, some
31
reports have revealed that tartrazine may cause adverse health effects like changes in hepatic
32
and renal parameters, reproductive toxicity, as well as neurobehavioural poisonousness when
33
it is excessively consumed.3,4 Therefore, the food industry must strictly control and regulate
34
the content of tartrazine in foods, which necessitates an interest in the development of an
35
efficient measurement technique to determine tartrazine in foods in terms of rapidness,
36
simplicity and sensitivity.
37
Until now, various instrumental techniques which analyzed tartrazine in foodstuff products
38
have been increasingly employed, which include thin-layer chromatography (TLC) method,5
39
electrochemical sensor,6 spectrophotometry,7 and high performance liquid chromatography
40
(HPLC).8 Nevertheless, these methods may not be suitable for routine monitoring due to they
41
require sophisticated equipments and time consuming sample preparation. As a result, the way
42
to develop a simple, economical, fast and reliable assay of tartrazine has been a challenge for
43
analytical researchers.
44
Recently, carbon quantum dots (C-dots), which are a new class of fluorescent nanomaterials
45
with a size less than 10 nm,have received much attention owning to their good water
46
solubility, excellent photostability, low toxicity and favorable biocompatibility.9,10 The
47
application of C-dots have been explored in fluorescent biosensing and in vivo bioimaging,
48
food detection together with food-packing domain.11-13 C-dots also served as reasonable
49
candidates for future nanodevices, cellular imaging, and biomedicine.14,15 Over the past years,
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several methods have been developed for the synthesis of C-dots, including arc discharge,16
51
laser ablation,17,18 electrochemical oxidation19 and microwave irradiation.20 However,
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hydrothermal carbonization has provided great advancement over existing physical methods
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which is due to its simplicity and production of C-dots with good quantum yield. Recently,
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hydrothermal carbonization of chitosan, orange peels, coffee grounds, and grass have been
55
successfully applied to synthesize fluorescent C-dots which could be probes for recognizing
56
various chemical species and cells in vitro and in vivo.21-24 All of these proved that
57
hydrothermal is an eco-friendly, facile and classical route for the synthesis of C-dots in
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aqueous media. From the point of material preparation, there is an urgent need to locate new
59
carbon source for simple, economical, and green synthesis of C-dots.
60
In this work, a facile and green method for the preparation of fluorescence C-dots by
61
hydrothermal treatment of aloe and the application has been proposed. Based on the
62
fluorescence quenching, the prepared C-dots can serve as an effective sensor for sensitive and
63
selective determination of tartrazine. The use of the synthesized C-dots for detection has been
64
validated by measuring the concentration of tartrazine in food samples collected from the
65
local supermarket.
66 67
■ EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURE
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Materials. Aloe was obtained from the potted plants in our laboratory and washed with
69
water for further use. Dichloromethane (CH2Cl2, 99.5%) was purchased from Aladdin
70
Industrial Corporation (Shanghai, China). Tartrazine (C16H9N4Na3O9S2, 87%), sunset yellow
71
(C16H10N2Na2O7S2,
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amaranth (C20H11N2Na3O10S3, 85%) was received from Aladdin Chemistry Co. Ltd.
73
(Shanghai, China). Sodium dihydrogen phosphate (NaH2PO4·H2O) and disodium hydrogen
74
phosphate dodecahydrate (Na2HPO4·12H2O) was obtained from Tianjin Fuchen Chemical
75
Reagents Co., Ltd. (Tianjin, China). All chemicals were of analytical reagent grade and used
85%),
erioglaucine
disodium
salt
(C37H34Na2N2O9S3,85%)
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without further purification. The ultrapure water used throughout the experiments was
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purified through an UPH-II-20T up water purification system (Chengdu Ultrapure Technology
78
Co. Ltd , Chengdu, China).
79
Apparatus and Characterization. The AFM analysis was carried out on a
80
Multimode/Nanoscope (Veeco Corporation, USA) on a tapping mode with a RTESP-Veeco
81
cantilever on a platinum coated mica substrate. All absorption spectra were recorded on a
82
Shimadzu UV-2550 UV-vis absorption spectrophotometer (Kyoto, Japan). Fluorescence
83
measurements were conducted with a Cary Eclipse fluorescence spectrophotometer (Varian,
84
Palo Alto, CA, USA). The infrared spectra were obtained on a Nicolet 6700 Fourier transform
85
infrared (FTIR) spectrometer (Thermo Electron Corporation, USA) with passed KBr pellet at
86
room temperature.
87
Synthesis of fluorescent C-dots. The C-dots were prepared by hydrothermal treatment of
88
fresh aloe in water. In a typical procedure, 5 g of aloe was added into 25 mL of water and then
89
the mixture was transferred into a 25-mL Teflon-lined autoclave and was heated at 180 ℃for
90
a period of 11 h. After heating, the autoclaves were allowed to naturally cool down at fume
91
hood on a heat-resistant plate and the resulted yellow solution was filtrated with 0.22 µm
92
membrane followed by washing with dichloromethane to remove the unreacted organic
93
moieties. Finally, the upper light yellow aqueous solution containing C-dots was collected and
94
stored at 4 ℃ for further characterization and use.
95
Quantum yield measurements. The quantum yield of the as-synthesized C-dots was
96
measured on the basis of a procedure described previously.25 Rhodamine 6G aqueous solution
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was used as a reference standard, which the quantum yield was 0.95 at 488 nm reported by the
98
literature. Absolute values of the quantum yield were calculated according to the following
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equation:
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Φ x = Φ std
I x Astd η x2 2 Ax I std η std
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where Φ is the quantum yield of the as-prepared C-dots , A is the absorbance and I is the
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corrected emission intensity at the excitation wavelength, η is the refractive index of the
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solvent. The subscript “std” and “x” refer to reference standard with known quantum yield
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and for the C-dots solution, respectively. For the sake of reducing effects of re-absorption
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within the sample on the observed emission spectrum, the absorbance values (A) of all
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solutions in the 10 mm cuvette were always controlled under 0.1.
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Sample pretreatment. Candy, steamed buns made of corns and honey were selected as
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test samples because tartrazine may be as a colorant added into them. All samples were
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obtained from the local supermarket in Nanchong, China. The candy or honey sample (10.0 g)
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was crushed and subsequently dissolved in hot water (~60 ℃). The resulted solution was
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transferred and diluted to 50 mL volumetric flask. The diluted solution was filtered through a
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0.45 µm filter membrane for subsequent use. The 10.0 g steamed buns and certain amount of
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water were added into a 100 mL beaker and then the mixture was blended by electric mixer
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and extracted with ultrasonic for 15 min, respectively. After extraction, the mixture was
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centrifugated at 12000 rpm for 10 min followed by transferring the supernatant and diluting to
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50 mL. The diluted solution was also filtered through a 0.45 µm filter membrane for
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subsequent use. The above sample pretreatment method is reference to literature with some
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minor modifications.26
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Detection of tartrazine in food samples. The tartrazine detection procedure was carried
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out in phosphate buffer (PB) (30 mM, pH 6.0) at 5 ℃. In a typical run, 450 µL of C-dots
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solution was added into 500 µL of PB, followed by adding 1000 µL of sample solution and
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mixing thoroughly. The resulted mixture was reconstituted to 4 mL with water. After reaction
123
time of 5 min at 5 ℃, the spectra were recorded under excitation at 441 nm with the slit
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widths setting at 10/10 nm. All the recoveries were calculated based on the equation below: Recovery = (Cmeasured - Cinitial) / Cadded
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■ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Optimization of the synthesis conditions. In order to make the excellent performance of
129
the synthesized C-dots, we have optimized the time and temperature of the synthesis simply
130
which the results shown in Figure S1 and Figure S2. From Figure S1 we can see clearly that
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the fluorescence intensity gradually increased with the reaction time up to 11 h while
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decreased when the time exceeded 11h. So 11 h was choosed as the optimal reaction time.
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Simultaneously, as displayed in Figure S2 the fluorescence intensity increased with the
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reaction temperature rise. We finally choosed 180 °C as the optimal temperature owning to
135
when the temperature exceed 180 °C, the fluorescence intensity increase not that obviously.
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Characterization. Figure. 1 shows the typical AFM image of the as-synthesized C-dots
137
solution. It reveals that the C-dots are well dispersed in solution with spherical shape and have
138
an average size of 5 nm approximately. Similarly, Figure S3 shows the typical TEM image of
139
the C-dots. It can be seen that the C-dots are in the monodispersion state and the size of the
140
them is consistent with the results of AFM.
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The absorption (black line) and emission spectra (green line) of the as-synthesized C-dots
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were shown in Figure 2. A peak at 278 nm exhibited in the UV-vis absorption spectrum,
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which was attributed to n- π* transition of C=O and π- π* transition of C=C.27 The
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photoluminescent (PL) spectrum shows an optimal emission peak at about 503 nm when
145
excited at 441 nm. The inset photograph in Figure. 2 indicates the C-dots aqueous solution
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under visible(a) and under UV illumination at 365 nm (b). The bright yellow PL of the
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C-dots under UV light is strong enough to be seen with the naked eye while when added some
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tartrazine the fluorescence quenched obviously (c). The full width at half maximum (FWHM)
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is 100 nm, suggesting that the relatively small size distribution of C-dots, which was
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consistent with AFM and TEM data and approximately equal to that of most reported
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C-dots.28,29 The strong fluorescence can be caused by the surface energy traps in the C-dots
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that become emissive upon stabilization.17
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To further investigate the optical properties, PL emission spectrum of the C-dots was
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recorded at progressively increased excitation wavelengths (Figure. 3). It can be observed that
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a red-shift was attributed in the emission spectra of C-dots from 443nm to 525 nm with
156
increasing excitation wavelengths, accompanied with the decrease of the fluorescence
157
intensity, revealing that the fluorescence of C-dots is strongly dependent on the excitation
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wavelength. This finding is in substantial agree with that of Vaibhavkumar.30,31 To investigate
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the components, surface groups and structure of the as-synthesized C-dots, EDS and FT-IR
160
have been carried out. Figure S4 shows the as-prepared C-dots are mainly composed of C, H,
161
O and N. As shown in Figure 4, a characteristic absorption bands of the −OH stretching
162
vibration mode at about 3400 and 1073 cm−1 could be observed. The band at 2923 cm−1
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corresponds to the C−H stretching mode.32 In addition, the peaks appear at 1590 and 1400
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cm−1 may be caused by the asymmetric and symmetric stretching vibration of COO−,
165
respectively. These findings provide evidence that both the hydroxyl and carboxylic groups
166
were originated from carbohydrates in the aloe.
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It is well known that the photostability of C-dots plays a key role in sensitive fluorescence
168
detection. In this connection, we studied the emission behavior of the C-dots under
169
continuous UV light illumination at 365 nm for 120 min. It was also noticed that as shown in
170
Figure S5 the photobleaching of C-dots is not observed and the fluorescence intensity of
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C-dots is remained constant even after 120 min of continuous UV light illumination,
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indicating the good photostability of C-dots. Using rhodamine 6G as a reference, a PL
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quantum yield (QY) of 10.37% was measured. Table S1 shows the comparison of the optical
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properties and applications of the C-dots derived from aloe with the reported methods. It can
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be seen that the present method are green, simple and have a relatively high quantum yield. At
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the same time, it is worth mentioning that the as-prepared C-dots emitting strong yellow
177
fluorescence while the most reported carbon dots blue and it can be a sensitive fluorescent
178
probe for colorants detention.
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Design Principle of the Sensor. Under the same experimental conditions, the fluorescence
180
spectra of the C-dots alone and the system of C-dots with tartrazine were recorded,
181
respectively. As shown in Figure S6, the C-dots presented strong fluorescence at 503 nm
182
when excited at 441 nm. Upon the addition of tartrazine, the fluorescence intensity of the
183
prepared C-dots decreased significantly. Basing on the fluorescence quenching, we speculated
184
that a facile fluorescence sensor for the determination of tartrazine could be constructed. The
185
synthetic strategy for C-dots and the principle of tartrazine sensing are schematically
186
presented in Scheme 1.
187
Mechanism of Fluorescence Quenching. Broadly speaking, various kinds of molecular
188
interactions with the quencher molecule can reduce the fluorescence quantum yield, such as
189
electron or energy transfer, collisional quenching, excited-state reaction and ground-state
190
complex formation The quenching mechanisms are usually divided into dynamic quenching
191
which resulting from collision and static quenching, resulting from the formation of a
192
ground-state complex between the fluorescence material and quencher. On the other hand,
193
they could be distinguished by some additional formations such as the relationship between
194
the quenching and viscosity, temperature and life time measurements.33 In general, the
195
dynamic fluorescence quenching constants will increase with the raise of the system
196
temperature due to the energy transfer efficiency and the effective collision times between
197
molecules will also increase. On the contrary, the values of the static fluorescence quenching
198
constants will decrease with the raise of temperature. Let us suppose that the mechanism is
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the dynamic quenching, it can be described by the following Stern-Volmer equation:34 F0 / F = 1 + K SV [Q ] = 1 + K qτ 0 [Q ]
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where F0 and F are the C-dots fluorescence intensities at 503 nm in the absence and presence
202
of tartrazine, respectively. KSV and Kq are the Stern-Volmer quenching constant and the
203
bimolecular quenching constant, respectively. [Q] is the concentration of tartrazine and τ0 is
204
the average lifetime of the C-dots without any other fluorescence quencher, with a general
205
value of 10-8 s. Figure 5 shows the fluorescence intensities of the C-dots analyzed by plotting
206
F0/F versus [Q] at 278, 288, 298 and 308 K. Table 1 summarizes the calculated KSV and Kq
207
values for each temperature. As shown, the KSV is inversely correlated with temperature and
208
the value of Kq is far larger than 2.0 ×1010 L·mol-1·s-1, which is the maximum scatter collision
209
quenching constant. These findings indicate that the quenching process may be caused by
210
static quenching. Additionally, the UV-vis spectra of the prepared C-dots alone and the system
211
of the C-dots with tartrazine are illustrated in Figure S7. As can be seen from this figure, with
212
the addition of tartrazine, the absorbance intensity of the C-dots at 280 nm increases, and with
213
a blue shift. This observation indicate that the formation of ground-state complexes is
214
generated due to the interaction between tartrazine and C-dots.
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Optimization of Experimental Conditions. With the purpose of investigating the
216
sensitivity, precision and selectivity of the analytical method, the parameters including the
217
media pH, dosage of C-dots, reaction temperature and incubation time were systematically
218
optimized for the system.
219
The Effect of the solution pH on the fluorescence quenching of C-dots in the presence of
220
tartrazine is shown in Figure 6(a). An increase in pH from 4.0 to 6.0 results in the increased
221
fluorescence quenching efficiency (represented as F0/F, where F0 and F are the fluorescence
222
intensities of the C-dots at 503 nm before and after the addition of tartrazine, respectively.)
223
whereas a further increase in pH from 6 to 7.5 leads to a gradual decrease. Such observation
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suggests that the fluorescence intensity of the C-dots strongly depends on the pH value of the
225
system. Our results are consistent with those of C-dots functioned with hydroxyl and
226
carboxylic/carbonyl moieties.10,19,32 Consequently, we selected 6.0 as the optimal pH for our
227
study.
228
The effect of the dosage of C-dots on the fluorescence quenching efficiency is presented in
229
Figure 6(b). The fluorescence quenching efficiency gradually increased with the dosage of
230
C-dots up to 450 µL. When the dosage of C-dots exceeded 450 µL, the fluorescence
231
quenching efficiency decreased. Therefore, 450 µL was used as the optimal dosage for further
232
performance
233
Figure 6(c) shows the fluorescence curves of the system at different temperatures. As the
234
temperature increased from 5 ℃ to 35 ℃ , the fluorescence quenching efficiency decreased
235
gradually. Among the temperatures studied, the maximum fluorescence intensity efficiency
236
was achived at 5 ℃. Hence, 5 ℃ is selected as the optimum reaction temperature.
237
The effects from incubation time on the fluorescence intensity of the system is shown in
238
Figure 6(d). No significant changes in F0/F was observed after incubation time of 1 min. In
239
order to ensure the consistency of the whole experiment, it is important to record the stable
240
fluorescence signal. Thus, 5 min is conservatively chosen as the optimum incubation time.
241
Analytical Performance for tartrazine Sensing. Sensitivity. The dependence of F0/F on
242
the different concentrations of tartrazine under the identical conditions is shown in Figure 7.
243
As displayed, the fluorescence quenching efficiency of C-dots gradually decreases with an
244
increase in the concentration of tartrazine. As shown in inset of Figure 7, the decrease in
245
fluorescence quenching efficiency was exhibited a linear response to the tartrazine
246
concentration in the range of 0.25-32.50 µM, which was consistent with the photograph of the
247
solutions under UV light. The calibration curve can be depicted as F0/F= 0.9604+ 0.0577X
248
( X is the concentration of tartrazine, µM) with a correlation coefficient of 0.9986. The
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relative standard deviation (RSD) was 0.25% through five parallel determinations (n=5) at a
250
fixed tartrazine concentration of 10.00 µM, indicating the excellent reliability of this sensor.
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The detection limit is estimated to be 73 nM at a signal-to-noise ratio of 3.
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In table 2, we compared the experimental results with those reported methods for tartrazine
253
detection. As shown in Table 2, our developed assay exhibits a wider linear range and lower
254
RSD compared to some methods. Our method can be an alternative to others for the
255
determination of tartrazine in samples, notwithstanding the limit of detection (LOD) from us
256
is not the smallest in Table 2, It is worth mentioning almost all of the reported sensors need
257
special equipment, a sophisticated technique, or complicated operations. By contrast, the
258
sensor we developed here has its own features including low cost in instrument, simplicity in
259
operation and fast response, which makes it more applicable for routine analysis of the
260
tartrazine in foods.
261
Selectivity. To evaluate the selectivity of this sensing system, we examined the
262
fluorescence response of the system to tartrazine at a concentration of 5.0 µM with the
263
presence of co-existing foreign substances such as K+, Ca2+, Zn2+, Fe3+, HCO-3 , NO-2 , glutamic
264
acid, glutathione (GSH), citric acid, phenylalanine, starch, tartaric acid, vitamin C, glucose,
265
and lactose, sunset yellow, erioglaucine disodium salt, amaranth under the same conditions.
266
As shown in Figure 8, for the present study, various different substances were added in the
267
test solution at the amount of 100-times tartrazine initially and the ratio would be gradually
268
reduced when the interference presented. It was found that some of the materials, such as Fe3+,
269
sunset yellow, erioglaucine disodium salt and amaranth, could be only allowed at relatively
270
lower levels. Nevertheless, the concentration of these substances were much lower than the
271
allowed levels in food samples. Meanwhile, most of the common excipients in foods could be
272
tolerated at high concentrations up to 100-times. That is to say the established strategy own a
273
highly selectivity toward tartrazine detection.
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Application in Food Samples. The developed approach was employed to detect the trace
275
level of tartrazine in some food samples. The results for the pre-treated food samples spiked
276
with known amounts of standard tartrazine are shown in Table 3. The recoveries for the
277
intra-day and inter-day ranged from 88.6% to 103.4% and 87.3% to 106.6%, respectively. All
278
of these results indicate that the accuracy and reliability of the proposed method can be
279
applied to the determination of tartrazine in food samples.
280
In summary, the C-dots based on aloe was synthesized via a simple and green method.
281
Without further chemical modification, the synthesized C-dots have been applied to the
282
sensitive and selective detection of tartrazine in some food samples. This new C-dots
283
described here may extend their great potential for cell imaging and drug delivery applications
284
due to the simplicity of their synthesis procedure and the use of affordable and environmental
285
friendly aloe as carbon sources.
286 287
■ ASSOCIATED CONTENT
288
Supporting Information description.
289
Experimental procedures for EDS, supplementary figures of EDS, fluorescence spectra and
290
absorbance spectra of the C-dots and the system of C-dots-tartrazine. This material is
291
available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
292 293
■ AUTHOR INFORMATION
294
Corresponding Author
295
*(X.Yang) Tel./Fax: +86-817-2568081. E-mail:
[email protected] and (X. Liao) Tel./Fax:
296
613-415-2098. E-mail
[email protected] 297
Funding
298
No.
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Notes
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The authors declare no competing financial interest.
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Abbreviations Used
302
C-dots, carbon quantum dots; TEM, transmission electron microscopy; AFM, atomic force
303
microscope; FTIR, fourier transform infrared spectroscopy; EDS, energy dispersive
304
spectrometry;
305
chromatograph; FWHM, full width at half maximum; PB, phosphate buffer; PL,
306
photoluminescent; QY, quantum yield; LOD, limit of detection; RSD, relative standard
307
deviation; GSH, glutathione.
TLC,
thin-layer
chromatography;
HPLC,
high
performance
liquid
308 309
■ Acknowledgments
310
The authors thank the Natural Science Foundation of China (21277109) and the Program for
311
Young Scientific and Technological Innovative Research Team in Sichuan Province
312
(2014TD0020) for research grants. The authors thank Prof. Martin M.F. Choi of the
313
Department of Chemistry, Hong Kong Baptist University, for valuable suggestions and
314
fluorescence spectra study.
315 316
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Figure Captions
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Figure 1. AFM images of the C-dots.
448
Figure 2. Uv-vis absorption (black line) and fluorescence emission (green line) spectra of the
449
C-dots. The inset shows the photographic images of C-dots under visible light (a), C-dots
450
under ultraviolet light (b), and C-dots with tartrazine (22.5 µΜ) under ultroviolet light (c).
451
Figure 3. Fluorescence emission spectra of C-dots obtained at different excitation
452
wavelengths progressively increasing from 370 nm to 480 nm with a 10 nm increment.
453
Figure 4. FT-IR spectrum of C-dots.
454
Figure 5. Stern-Volmer plots for the system of C-dots-tartrazine under the temperature of 278
455
K,288 K,298 K, 308 K, respectively. Where F0 and F are the fluorescence intensity of C-dots
456
in the absence and presence of tartrazine. Conditions: C-dots, 450 µL and PB, 30 mΜ,
457
pH=6.0.
458
Figure 6. Effect of (a) pH of buffer solution, (b) dosage of C-dots, (c) reaction temperature
459
and (d) reaction time on fluorescence quenching efficiency of the C-dots-tartrazine system.
460
Where F0 and F are the fluorescence intensity of C-dots in the absence and presence of
461
tartrazine. Conditions: PB, 30 mM; tartrazine, 10 µΜ
462
Figure 7. Fluorescence emission spectra of C-dots in the presence of different concentrations
463
of tartrazine in 30 mΜ PB (pH=6.0). From a to l: 0.00, 0.25, 0.75, 2.50, 3.75, 5.00, 7.50,
464
12.50, 17.50, 22.50, 27.50, 32.50 µΜ. C-dots, 450 µL. (Inset) The insets shows the
465
photographic images of the corresponding solutions under UV light and the relationship curve
466
between F0/F and concentration of tartrazine.
467
Figure 8. Effects of potentially interfering substances. Conditions: C-dots, 450 µL; PB, 30
468
mM, pH=6.0; tartrazine, 5.0 µΜ. (0) noninterrerence, (1) glucose, 500 µΜ, (2) lactose, 500
469
µΜ, (3) starch, 500 µΜ, (4) citric acid, 500 µΜ, (5) tartaric acid, 500 µΜ, (6) ascorbic acid,
470
500 µΜ, (7) glutamic acid, 250 µΜ, (8) phenylalmine, 250 µΜ, (9) NO 2 , 500 µΜ, (10)
471
HCO 3 ,500 µΜ, (11) Ca2+, 500 µΜ, (12) Zn2+,500 µΜ, (13) K+, 500 µΜ, (14) Fe3+, 25 µΜ, (15)
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sunset yellow, 5.0 µΜ, (16) erioglaucine disodium salt, 25 µΜ, (17) amaranth, 5.0 µΜ.
-
-
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Table 1. Stern-Volmer Quenching Constants for the Interaction of C-dots and Tartrazine
475
at Different Temperatures
pH
T (K)
KSV (L· mol-1)
Kq (L· mol-1 · s-1)
R
SD
6.0
278
5.663×104
5.663×1012
0.9984
0.0278
6.0
288
5.213×104
5.213×1012
0.9960
0.0402
6.0
298
5.178×104
5.178×1012
0.9967
0.0361
6.0
308
4.734×104
4.734×1012
0.9939
0.0452
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Table 2. Comparison of the proposed method with other methods for determination of
478
tartrazine Method
R2
Linear range (µM)
LOD (nM)
RSD%
Ref.
Graphene and mesoporous TiO2 Electrochemical sensor
0.02-1.18
0.994
8
2.70
26
Spectrophotometry method
0.00131-0.67
0.992
0.56
0.98
23
Electrochemical detection
0.11-56
-
56
3.12
17
Electrochemical detection
0.05-20
-
14.3
-
18
Electrochemical sensor
0.00936-0.37
0.994
2.8
4.3
22
High-performance liquid chromatography
0.0934-9.34
0.999
18.5
4.3
35
Alumina microfibers-based electrochemical sensor
0.005-0.14
0.998
2.0
4.7
36
Gold nanoparticles carbon paste electrode
0.05-1.6
0.997
2
1.1
37
Differential pulse polarography
0.19-19
0.999
30
-
38
Multi-walled carbon nanotubes film-modified electrode
0.37-74.8
0.990
187
5.2
39
Solid phase spectrophotometry
0.094-1.22
0.998
-
4.00
40
Capillary zone electrophoresis
5.6-178
0.995
2430
-
41
Thin-layer chromatography
74.9-356
0.992
-
0.03
5
Reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography
0.011-39.3
0.999
3.5
-
42
Fluorescence analysis
0.25-32.5
0.998
73
0.25
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Table 3. Recovery test and precision of the analysis of tartrazine in food samples Intra-day Food samples
Steamed buns
Honey
Candy
Detected (µΜ)
NDb
NDb
4.80
Spiked (uM)
Inter-day
Founda (uM)
Recovery (%)
RSD (%)
Founda (uM)
Recovery (%)
RSD (%)
1.00
1.00±0.07
99.9
2.8
1.06±0.09
106.6
4.2
5.00
4.96±0.07
99.2
0.6
4.99±0.07
99.8
0.6
7.00
7.00±0.05
100.0
0.3
7.02±0.13
100.3
0.7
1.00
1.04±0.11
103.4
3.9
1.05±0.15
105.4
5.8
5.00
4.96±0.03
99.1
0.2
5.00±0.07
99.9
0.6
7.00
7.04±0.10
100.6
0.7
7.00±0.18
100.0
1.0
3.00
7.48±0.15
88.6
0.8
7.44±0.08
87.3
0.4
5.00
9.44±0.06
92.3
0.2
9.51±0.12
93.6
0.5
7.00
11.12±0.12
90.0
0.5
11.16±0.10
90.4
0.4
a
Value = mean ±S.D (n=5).
b
Not detectable.
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Scheme 1. Scheme of the synthetic strategy for C-dots and the principle of tartrazine
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sensing.
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