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White-light emissive upconversion nanoparticles for visual and colorimetric determination of the pesticide thiram.

Mikrochimica Acta 2019 January 13
The authors describe the use of white-light emitting upconversion nanoparticles (WL-UCNPs) for visual detection of the pesticide thiram. The method is demonstrated to undergo a better discernable color change upon target binding. The WL-UCNPs are modified with the lead(II)-dithizone complex which acts as the energy acceptor and recognition unit. This leads to quenching of the blue (475 nm) and green (545 nm) emissions of the WL-UCNPs, while the red emission (650 nm) remains unaffected. Upon addition of thiram, the quenched emissions are recovered, with a linear signal increase in the range from 2 nM to 20 nM of thiram and a limit of detection of 0.26 nM. The nanoprobe was further integrated into a test paper for visual detection. The concentration-dependent color change that varies from red to cyan and bluish violet and then to white can be visually distinguished. Graphical abstract Schematic presentation of a white-light emissive upconversion nanoparticle based test paper for color-discernable detection of the pesticide thiram. The test stripe exhibits a concentration-dependent color variation spanning from red, cyan, to bluish violet, and at last to white.

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