03 April 2023
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Brazilian researchers' new discovery.
RESEARCHERS at the University of São Paulo (USP) in Brazil have developed a kraft paper-based electrochemical sensor that can detect traces of pesticides in potatoes and other vegetables in real time when coupled to an electronic device.
The results are reported in an article published in the journal Food Chemistry.
Osvaldo Novais de Oliveira Junior, penultimate author of the article and a professor at IFSC-USP, said: "To find out whether a food sample contains traces of pesticides by conventional methods, you must grind up the sample and submit it to time-consuming chemical processes before any such substances can be detected. Wearable sensors like the one we developed for continuous monitoring of pesticides in agriculture and the food industry eliminate the need for these complex processes. Inspection is much easier, cheaper and reliable for a supermarket, restaurant or importer, for example."
The new device is highly sensitive and resembles the glucometers used by diabetics to measure blood sugar, except that the results of food scanning for pesticides are displayed on a smartphone.
José Luiz Bott Neto, corresponding author of the article and a postdoctoral fellow at IFSC-USP, said: "In the tests we performed, its sensitivity was similar to the conventional method's. Plus, it's fast and inexpensive."
The device consists of a paper substrate modified with carbon ink and submitted to electrochemical treatment in an acid medium to activate carboxyl groups and make detection possible, Bott explained.
"We use the silkscreen process to transfer carbon-conducting ink to a strip of kraft paper, thereby creating a device based on electrochemistry. It has three carbon electrodes and is immersed in an acidic solution to activate the carboxyl groups. In other words, oxygen atoms are added to the structure of the carbon electrode. When it comes into contact with a sample contaminated with carbendazim, the sensor induces an electrochemical oxidation reaction that permits detection of the fungicide. The quantity of carbendazim is measured via electrical current," he said.
In developing the device, the researchers evaluated the stability and structure of the paper substrate. "The properties of the paper itself were an important part of our research," said Thiago Serafim Martins, first author of the article and a postdoctoral fellow at IFSC-USP.
The researchers analysed kraft paper and parchment, finding both types of paper to be stable enough to serve as a substrate for the sensor. However, the porousness of kraft paper conferred more sensitivity on the sensor and the carboxyl groups formed during electrochemical activation, Martins explained, adding that paper-based electrodes could be used in many applications.
"There are commercial electrodes made of plastic or ceramic material. We successfully developed electrochemical sensors based on paper, a much more malleable material and therefore potentially useful in many areas, not just on farms or in supermarkets, but also in healthcare, for example," he said.
Source: Phys Org