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Indirect Quantification of Glyphosate by SERS Using an Incubation Process With Hemin as the Reporter Molecule: A Contribution to Signal Amplification Mechanism

The indirect determination of the most used herbicide worldwide, glyphosate, was achieved by the SERS technique using hemin chloride as the reporter molecule. An incubation process between hemin and glyphosate solutions was required to obtain a reproducible Raman signal on SERS substrates consisting...

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Autores principales: López-Castaños, Karen A., Ortiz-Frade, Luis A., Méndez, Erika, Quiroga-González, Enrique, González-Fuentes, Miguel A., Méndez-Albores, Alia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7775572/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33392153
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2020.612076
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author López-Castaños, Karen A.
Ortiz-Frade, Luis A.
Méndez, Erika
Quiroga-González, Enrique
González-Fuentes, Miguel A.
Méndez-Albores, Alia
author_facet López-Castaños, Karen A.
Ortiz-Frade, Luis A.
Méndez, Erika
Quiroga-González, Enrique
González-Fuentes, Miguel A.
Méndez-Albores, Alia
author_sort López-Castaños, Karen A.
collection PubMed
description The indirect determination of the most used herbicide worldwide, glyphosate, was achieved by the SERS technique using hemin chloride as the reporter molecule. An incubation process between hemin and glyphosate solutions was required to obtain a reproducible Raman signal on SERS substrates consisting of silicon decorated with Ag nanoparticles (Si-AgNPs). At 780 nm of excitation wavelength, SERS spectra from hemin solutions do not show extra bands in the presence of glyphosate. However, the hemin bands increase in intensity as a function of glyphosate concentration. This allows the quantification of the herbicide using as marker band the signal associated with the ring breathing mode of pyridine at 745 cm(−1). The linear range was from 1 × 10(−10) to 1 × 10(−5) M and the limit of detection (LOD) was 9.59 × 10(−12) M. This methodology was successfully applied to the quantification of the herbicide in honey. From Raman experiments with and without silver nanoparticles, it was possible to state that the hemin is the species responsible for the absorption in the absence or the presence of the herbicide via vinyl groups. Likewise, when the glyphosate concentration increases, a subtle increase occurs in the planar orientation of the vinyl group at position 2 in the porphyrin ring of hemin over the silver surface, favoring the reduction of the molecule. The total Raman signal of the hemin-glyphosate incubated solutions includes a maximized electromagnetic contribution by the use of the appropriate laser excitation, and chemical contributions related to charge transfer between silver and hemin, and from resonance properties of Raman scattering of hemin. Incubation of the reporter molecule with the analyte before the conjugation with the SERS substrate has not been explored before and could be extrapolated to other reporter-analyte systems that depend on a binding equilibrium process.
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spelling pubmed-77755722021-01-02 Indirect Quantification of Glyphosate by SERS Using an Incubation Process With Hemin as the Reporter Molecule: A Contribution to Signal Amplification Mechanism López-Castaños, Karen A. Ortiz-Frade, Luis A. Méndez, Erika Quiroga-González, Enrique González-Fuentes, Miguel A. Méndez-Albores, Alia Front Chem Chemistry The indirect determination of the most used herbicide worldwide, glyphosate, was achieved by the SERS technique using hemin chloride as the reporter molecule. An incubation process between hemin and glyphosate solutions was required to obtain a reproducible Raman signal on SERS substrates consisting of silicon decorated with Ag nanoparticles (Si-AgNPs). At 780 nm of excitation wavelength, SERS spectra from hemin solutions do not show extra bands in the presence of glyphosate. However, the hemin bands increase in intensity as a function of glyphosate concentration. This allows the quantification of the herbicide using as marker band the signal associated with the ring breathing mode of pyridine at 745 cm(−1). The linear range was from 1 × 10(−10) to 1 × 10(−5) M and the limit of detection (LOD) was 9.59 × 10(−12) M. This methodology was successfully applied to the quantification of the herbicide in honey. From Raman experiments with and without silver nanoparticles, it was possible to state that the hemin is the species responsible for the absorption in the absence or the presence of the herbicide via vinyl groups. Likewise, when the glyphosate concentration increases, a subtle increase occurs in the planar orientation of the vinyl group at position 2 in the porphyrin ring of hemin over the silver surface, favoring the reduction of the molecule. The total Raman signal of the hemin-glyphosate incubated solutions includes a maximized electromagnetic contribution by the use of the appropriate laser excitation, and chemical contributions related to charge transfer between silver and hemin, and from resonance properties of Raman scattering of hemin. Incubation of the reporter molecule with the analyte before the conjugation with the SERS substrate has not been explored before and could be extrapolated to other reporter-analyte systems that depend on a binding equilibrium process. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7775572/ /pubmed/33392153 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2020.612076 Text en Copyright © 2020 López-Castaños, Ortiz-Frade, Méndez, Quiroga-González, González-Fuentes and Méndez-Albores. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Chemistry
López-Castaños, Karen A.
Ortiz-Frade, Luis A.
Méndez, Erika
Quiroga-González, Enrique
González-Fuentes, Miguel A.
Méndez-Albores, Alia
Indirect Quantification of Glyphosate by SERS Using an Incubation Process With Hemin as the Reporter Molecule: A Contribution to Signal Amplification Mechanism
title Indirect Quantification of Glyphosate by SERS Using an Incubation Process With Hemin as the Reporter Molecule: A Contribution to Signal Amplification Mechanism
title_full Indirect Quantification of Glyphosate by SERS Using an Incubation Process With Hemin as the Reporter Molecule: A Contribution to Signal Amplification Mechanism
title_fullStr Indirect Quantification of Glyphosate by SERS Using an Incubation Process With Hemin as the Reporter Molecule: A Contribution to Signal Amplification Mechanism
title_full_unstemmed Indirect Quantification of Glyphosate by SERS Using an Incubation Process With Hemin as the Reporter Molecule: A Contribution to Signal Amplification Mechanism
title_short Indirect Quantification of Glyphosate by SERS Using an Incubation Process With Hemin as the Reporter Molecule: A Contribution to Signal Amplification Mechanism
title_sort indirect quantification of glyphosate by sers using an incubation process with hemin as the reporter molecule: a contribution to signal amplification mechanism
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7775572/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33392153
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2020.612076
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