Bismuth Film along with dsDNA-Modified Electrode Surfaces as Promising (bio)Sensors in the Analysis of Heavy Metals in Soils
Vasiliki Keramari, Sotiria G. Papadimou, Evangelia E. Golia, Stella Girousi

TL;DR
This study compares methods for detecting heavy metals in soil, showing that a voltammetric method using bismuth film and DNA biosensors is faster and cheaper than traditional techniques.
Contribution
The study introduces a dsDNA biosensor for redox speciation analysis of copper in soil using voltammetry.
Findings
AAS and ASV methods showed satisfactory correlation for metal detection in soil samples.
SWASV had lower detection limits for cadmium compared to AAS using graphite furnace.
Flame-AAS overestimated cadmium concentrations compared to SWASV.
Abstract
Heavy metals constitute pollutants that are particularly common in air, water, and soil. They are present in both urban and rural environments, on land, and in marine ecosystems, where they cause serious environmental problems since they do not degrade easily, remain almost unchanged for long periods, and bioaccumulate. The detection and especially the quantification of metals require a systematic process. Regular monitoring is necessary because of seasonal variations in metal levels. Consequently, there is a significant need for rapid and low-cost metal determination methods. In this study, we compare and analytically validate absorption spectrometry with a sensitive voltammetric method, which uses a bismuth film-plated electrode surface and applies stripping voltammetry. Atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS) represents a well-established analytical technique, while the applicability of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics
