Faculty Publications

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    Colorimetric differentiation of arsenite and arsenate anions using a bithiophene sensor with two binding sites: DFT studies and application in food and water samples
    (Royal Society of Chemistry, 2024) K, K.; Nityananda Shetty, A.N.; Trivedi, D.R.
    Chemosensor N7R1 with two acidic binding sites was synthesized, and the ability of the sensor to differentiate arsenite and arsenate in the organo-aqueous medium was evaluated using colorimetric sensing methods. N7R1 distinguished arsenite with a peacock blue color and arsenate with a pale green color in a DMSO/H2O (9 : 1, v/v) solvent mixture. The specific selectivity for arsenite was achieved in DMSO/H2O (7 : 3, v/v). The sensor demonstrated stability over a pH range of 5 to 12. The computed high binding constant of 9.3176 × 1011 M−2 and a lower detection limit of 11.48 ppb for arsenite exposed the chemosensor's higher potential for arsenite detection. The binding mechanism with a 1 : 2 binding process is confirmed using UV-Vis and 1H NMR titrations, electrochemical studies, mass spectral analysis and DFT calculations. Practical applications were demonstrated by utilizing test strips and molecular logic gates. Chemosensor N7R1 successfully detected arsenite in real water samples, as well as honey and milk samples. © 2024 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
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    Selective chromogenic nanomolar level sensing of arsenite anions in food samples using dual binding site probes
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2025) K, K.; Nityananda Shetty, A.N.; Trivedi, D.R.
    In the present study, two chromogenic probes, N7R2 and N7R3, each containing two binding sites, were designed and synthesized for the selective detection of arsenite in DMSO/H2O (1:1, v/v). The probes exhibited stability across a pH range spanning from 5 to 12. The lower detection limits of 2.01 ppb (18.86 nM) for N7R2 and 1.79 ppb (16.75 nM) for N7R3, which are much lower than the WHO recommended permissible limit of arsenite, confirmed the superior efficiency of the probes in detecting arsenite. The detection mechanism for arsenite was proposed through UV and 1H NMR titrations, electrochemical studies, and DFT calculations. Practical applications were demonstrated through the fabrication of test strips and molecular logic gates. The probes efficiently recognized arsenite in real water, honey, milk samples, and fruit/vegetable juices. Both N7R2 and N7R3 exhibited excellent recovery rates in the analysis of food samples, demonstrating the probes' usefulness in real sample analysis. © 2024