Paper-Based Photosensor Simplifies Hydrogen Peroxide Detection
Researchers at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) have developed an inexpensive sensor made with a photoluminescent paper that enables the visual detection of even miniscule amounts of hydrogen peroxide (H
2O
2). The chemical is found in diverse products and biological cells.
The sensor uses a sensitive photoluminescence assay for H
2O
2 that the researchers developed by inducing photoluminescence in terbium (Tb
3+), a rare earth metal, in a hydrogel matrix.
They also designed a sensitizer molecule for the hydrogel that causes the Tb
3+ to emit green light under a UV lamp. When they combined the sensitizer molecule with a masking agent, the green light emission disappeared. However, when they added H
2O
2 to this combination, it unmasked the sensitizer molecule, causing the Tb
3+ to emit green light once again.
“The molecule we have designed is very specifically unmasked by hydrogen peroxide,” professor Uday Maitra said.
The researchers coated and air-dried paper discs, about 0.45 cm in diameter, with the soft hydrogel solution containing the sensitizer molecule and a liquid containing H
2O
2.
When exposed to H
2O
2, the discs emitted green light when placed under a UV lamp. The intensity of the emitted light was proportional to the concentration of H
2O
2. Green luminescence from the paper discs allowed naked-eye detection of H
2O
2 at the micromolar level. “You don’t need any sophisticated instruments. All you need is a simple UV light source,” researcher Arnab Dutta said.
Researcher Arnab Dutta working in the lab of IISc professor Uday Maitra. Courtesy of Arnab Dutta.
When the researchers used the technique to randomly test five different hand sanitizer brands, they found that only three contained 0.125% H
2O
2, the level mandated by the World Health Organization. One sample tested much lower than 0.125% and another was found to contain almost 0% H
2O
2.
The results indicate that the low-cost system could be practically adopted, especially in resource-limited areas, to quantify and detect H
2O
2 for quality control and other applications, testing biological fluids such as blood for H
2O
2 or tracing peroxide-based explosives. The paper disc is also biodegradable.
“Hydrogen peroxide can be detected on a larger scale using titration and other experiments, but those are cumbersome and require training. This method is easy because of its simplicity,” Maitra said.
Maitra’s lab is working with various sensitizer molecules that trigger the photoluminescence of lanthanides (i.e., metallic elements such as Tb
3+) in the presence of specific chemicals or compounds. The team previously developed paper-based sensors for detecting specific antioxidants in green tea, as well as sensors for various enzymes. Currently, the researchers are focused on reducing the reaction time of the H
2O
2 photosensor, which is longer when the concentration of H
2O
2 is low.
Maitra said they are also working on developing a portable device that will automate the detection process, and that the group is in touch with a startup company. “We have a few prototypes made with UV LEDs and a camera, to generate the emission, take a photograph, and use an image processing app to quantify the amount of hydrogen peroxide,” he said.
The research was published in
ACS Sensors (
www.doi.org/10.1021/acssensors.1c02322).
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