Modified Electrodes Used for Electrochemical Detection of Metal Ions in Environmental Analysis
Heavy metal pollution is one of the most serious environmental problems, and regulations are becoming stricter. Many efforts have been made to develop sensors for monitoring heavy metals in the environment. This review aims at presenting the different label-free strategies used to develop electroche...
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doaj-e4eaa4126b2c4813ae5a41550e87ba692020-11-24T20:52:10ZengMDPI AGBiosensors2079-63742015-04-015224127510.3390/bios5020241bios5020241Modified Electrodes Used for Electrochemical Detection of Metal Ions in Environmental AnalysisGregory March0Tuan Dung Nguyen1Benoit Piro2Klearia, route de Nozay, Marcoussis 91460, FranceInstitute for Tropical Technology, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 18 Hoang Quoc Viet, Cau Giay District, Hanoi, VietnamChemistry Department, University Paris Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cité, ITODYS, UMR 7086 CNRS, 15 rue J-A de Baïf, 75205 Paris Cedex 13, FranceHeavy metal pollution is one of the most serious environmental problems, and regulations are becoming stricter. Many efforts have been made to develop sensors for monitoring heavy metals in the environment. This review aims at presenting the different label-free strategies used to develop electrochemical sensors for the detection of heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, mercury, arsenic etc. The first part of this review will be dedicated to stripping voltammetry techniques, on unmodified electrodes (mercury, bismuth or noble metals in the bulk form), or electrodes modified at their surface by nanoparticles, nanostructures (CNT, graphene) or other innovative materials such as boron-doped diamond. The second part will be dedicated to chemically modified electrodes especially those with conducting polymers. The last part of this review will focus on bio-modified electrodes. Special attention will be paid to strategies using biomolecules (DNA, peptide or proteins), enzymes or whole cells.http://www.mdpi.com/2079-6374/5/2/241heavy metalselectrochemical sensorsstripping voltammetryconducting polymersDNAenzymeswhole cells |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Gregory March Tuan Dung Nguyen Benoit Piro |
spellingShingle |
Gregory March Tuan Dung Nguyen Benoit Piro Modified Electrodes Used for Electrochemical Detection of Metal Ions in Environmental Analysis Biosensors heavy metals electrochemical sensors stripping voltammetry conducting polymers DNA enzymes whole cells |
author_facet |
Gregory March Tuan Dung Nguyen Benoit Piro |
author_sort |
Gregory March |
title |
Modified Electrodes Used for Electrochemical Detection of Metal Ions in Environmental Analysis |
title_short |
Modified Electrodes Used for Electrochemical Detection of Metal Ions in Environmental Analysis |
title_full |
Modified Electrodes Used for Electrochemical Detection of Metal Ions in Environmental Analysis |
title_fullStr |
Modified Electrodes Used for Electrochemical Detection of Metal Ions in Environmental Analysis |
title_full_unstemmed |
Modified Electrodes Used for Electrochemical Detection of Metal Ions in Environmental Analysis |
title_sort |
modified electrodes used for electrochemical detection of metal ions in environmental analysis |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Biosensors |
issn |
2079-6374 |
publishDate |
2015-04-01 |
description |
Heavy metal pollution is one of the most serious environmental problems, and regulations are becoming stricter. Many efforts have been made to develop sensors for monitoring heavy metals in the environment. This review aims at presenting the different label-free strategies used to develop electrochemical sensors for the detection of heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, mercury, arsenic etc. The first part of this review will be dedicated to stripping voltammetry techniques, on unmodified electrodes (mercury, bismuth or noble metals in the bulk form), or electrodes modified at their surface by nanoparticles, nanostructures (CNT, graphene) or other innovative materials such as boron-doped diamond. The second part will be dedicated to chemically modified electrodes especially those with conducting polymers. The last part of this review will focus on bio-modified electrodes. Special attention will be paid to strategies using biomolecules (DNA, peptide or proteins), enzymes or whole cells. |
topic |
heavy metals electrochemical sensors stripping voltammetry conducting polymers DNA enzymes whole cells |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2079-6374/5/2/241 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT gregorymarch modifiedelectrodesusedforelectrochemicaldetectionofmetalionsinenvironmentalanalysis AT tuandungnguyen modifiedelectrodesusedforelectrochemicaldetectionofmetalionsinenvironmentalanalysis AT benoitpiro modifiedelectrodesusedforelectrochemicaldetectionofmetalionsinenvironmentalanalysis |
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1716800632347688960 |