Gajanan A. Bodkhe,Mayuri S. More,Ahmad Umar,Ahmed A. Ibrahim,Subramanian Siva,Megha A. Deshmukh,Nikesh N. Ingle,D.K. Gaikwad,Meng‐Lin Tsai,Tibor Hianik,Myung‐Hee Kim,Mahendra D. Shirsat
Heavy metal ions (HMIs) are major water pollutants, and their toxicity for humans is a great concern for scientists and environmentalists. They are harmful to health even at trace levels; therefore, identifying and removing heavy metals from water is critical. Herein, we report highly selective and sensitive multi-analyte detection of HMIs in water using an electrochemical sensor probe based on Ag nanoparticles and single-walled carbon nanotubes incorporating copper benzene tri-carboxylate metal–organic frameworks (Ag/SWNTs@CuBTC-MOFs). The materials were characterized using FTIR, XPS, XRD, and FE-SEM with EDX mapping, TEM, TG-DTA, BET surface area, CV, and EIS. The Ag/SWNTs@CuBTC-MOF electrochemical sensor was tested by differential pulse voltammetry over a pH range of 3–10 for various HMIs. It shows high pH-dependent sensitivity towards Hg2+ (pH-5.0), Ni2+ (pH 7.0), and Fe3+ (pH 10.0) ions and a limit of detection of 1.39 nM, 2.6 nM, and 3.03 nM, respectively. The fabricated sensor probe exhibits high selectivity, good linearity, and a detection limit below the maximum contamination limit, as the US Environmental Protection Agency suggested.