Amorphous fluorinated plastic can be produced with a refractive index similar to that of water, a condition that makes it essentially invisible when immersed in aqueous solutions. Because of this property, even a small amount of adsorbed molecules on the plastic-water interface provides a detectable optical signal. We investigate two distinct substrates made of this material, characterized by different interface areas: a prism and a microporous membrane. We demonstrate that both substrates enable the label-free detection of molecular compounds in water even without any surface functionalization. The adsorption of molecules on the planar surface of the prism provides an increase of optical reflectivity, whereas the adsorption on the internal surface of the microporous membrane yields an increase of scattered light. Despite the different mechanisms, we find a similar optical response upon adsorption. We confirm this result by a theoretical model accounting for both reflection and scattering. We investigate the spontaneous adsorption process for different kinds of molecules: surfactants with different charges, a protein (lysozyme), and a constituent of gasoline (hexane). The measured equilibrium and kinetic constants for adsorption differ by orders of magnitudes among the different classes of molecules. By suitable analytical models, accounting for the effects of mass limitation and transport, we find a simple and general scaling of the adsorption parameters with the molecular size.

Selective adsorption on fluorinated plastic enables the optical detection of molecular pollutants in water / R. Lanfranco, F. Giavazzi, M. Salina, G. Tagliabue, E. Di Nicolò, T. Bellini, M. Buscaglia. - In: PHYSICAL REVIEW APPLIED. - ISSN 2331-7019. - 5:5(2016 May), pp. 054012.1-054012.15.

Selective adsorption on fluorinated plastic enables the optical detection of molecular pollutants in water

R. Lanfranco
Primo
;
F. Giavazzi
Secondo
;
M. Salina;G. Tagliabue;T. Bellini
Penultimo
;
M. Buscaglia
2016

Abstract

Amorphous fluorinated plastic can be produced with a refractive index similar to that of water, a condition that makes it essentially invisible when immersed in aqueous solutions. Because of this property, even a small amount of adsorbed molecules on the plastic-water interface provides a detectable optical signal. We investigate two distinct substrates made of this material, characterized by different interface areas: a prism and a microporous membrane. We demonstrate that both substrates enable the label-free detection of molecular compounds in water even without any surface functionalization. The adsorption of molecules on the planar surface of the prism provides an increase of optical reflectivity, whereas the adsorption on the internal surface of the microporous membrane yields an increase of scattered light. Despite the different mechanisms, we find a similar optical response upon adsorption. We confirm this result by a theoretical model accounting for both reflection and scattering. We investigate the spontaneous adsorption process for different kinds of molecules: surfactants with different charges, a protein (lysozyme), and a constituent of gasoline (hexane). The measured equilibrium and kinetic constants for adsorption differ by orders of magnitudes among the different classes of molecules. By suitable analytical models, accounting for the effects of mass limitation and transport, we find a simple and general scaling of the adsorption parameters with the molecular size.
No
English
adsorption; optical sensors; label-free; perfluoropolymer; surfactant; water; pollutant
Settore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali, Ambientali, Biol.e Medicin)
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
   Next Generation Biomimetic Analytical Platforms. Building Blocks for Ubiquitous Environmental Sensor Networks
   NAPES
   EUROPEAN COMMISSION
   FP7
   604241
mag-2016
American physical society
5
5
054012
1
15
15
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Selective adsorption on fluorinated plastic enables the optical detection of molecular pollutants in water / R. Lanfranco, F. Giavazzi, M. Salina, G. Tagliabue, E. Di Nicolò, T. Bellini, M. Buscaglia. - In: PHYSICAL REVIEW APPLIED. - ISSN 2331-7019. - 5:5(2016 May), pp. 054012.1-054012.15.
partially_open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
7
262
Article (author)
si
R. Lanfranco, F. Giavazzi, M. Salina, G. Tagliabue, E. Di Nicolò, T. Bellini, M. Buscaglia
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/421561
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