Among several forms of water pollutants, common pesticides, herbicides, organic dyes and heavy metals present serious and persistent threat to human health due to their severe toxicity. Recently, piezocatalysis based...
The limitations faced by conventional antibacterial therapies and the subsequent amplification of multidrug-resistant (MDR) microorganisms have increased, necessitating the urgent development of innovative antibacterial techniques. Nanoparticle-mediated therapeutics have emerged as...
In modern society, massive industrialization escalates environmental degradation by liberating various contaminants into the environment. Hexavalent chromium is a heavy metal that is being discharged from tannery and other industries, resulting in various carcinogenic diseases. This study reports a carbon dot (cdot)-based fluorometric probe for detecting hexavalent chromium in water. This is the very first time that cdots are tailored over the boehmite nanoparticle's surface using an in situ approach. Validation of formation of the nanocomposite has been discussed in detail employing the Rietveld refinement-based X-ray crystallography method. Vibrational spectroscopy and electron microscopy of the sample authenticate the nucleation process and the growth mechanism. The Stern−Volmer approach and time-resolved fluorescence measurements justify the sensitivity of the sensor (∼58 nM), and selectivity is analyzed by exposing the material to different ionic environments. Density functional theory (DFT) is applied herein to analyze the origin of fluorescence and the sensing mechanism of the probe, which shows that photoinduced electron transfer is responsible for the turn-off-based sensing of Cr(VI). The molecular docking simulation is carried out to ensure the binding of cdots to the binding pocket of the glutathione enzyme, which is responsible for treating reactive oxygen species-mediated DNA damage due to elements such as hexavalent chromium. Time-dependent density functional calculations show that the fluorometric probe is capable of detecting Cr(VI) in living cells making it an early stage chromium-mediated carcinogen detector.
This work reports a solvothermal synthesis of ferromagnetic bismuth ferrite (BFO) nanoparticle and its piezo activity in the domain of catalytic degradation of carcinogenic and genotoxic rhodamine B (RhB) dye...
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