B2 Non-refereed book chapter or chapter in a compilation book

Electrochemical sensors based on green molecularly imprinted polymers




AuthorsMostafiz, Bahar; Banan, Kamran; Arjomand Bigdeli, Sara; Soofiani, Ava; Keshavarz, Azadeh; Afsharara, Hanif; Hatamabadi, Dara; Ghalkhani, Masoumeh; Asadian, Elham; Ghorbani-Bidkorbeh, Fatemeh; Peltola, Emilia

EditorsHussain Chaudhery Mustansar; Keçili, Rüstem

Publication year2024

Book title Green Imprinted Materials: From Design to Environmental and Food Applications

First page 387

Last page417

ISBN978-0-443-15431-7

eISBN978-0-443-15432-4

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-443-15431-7.00009-X

Web address https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-443-15431-7.00009-X


Abstract

Green molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) can be fabricated by a number of techniques and then be integrated with several analytical methods. Electrochemistry is one of the most notable of these methods. Electrochemical (EC) sensors and MIPs incorporation opens the door to the possibility of harvesting ecological advantages of EC methods, such as low solvent consumption, small-scaled portable devices, and minimum waste production, alongside with MIP's notable benefits such as high selectivity, production flexibility, and stability. Even though electrometry is considered an eco-friendly discipline but adjusting MIP synthesis steps (both in chemical reagents and polymerization techniques) or employing computational strategies in their design and development developing, as well as miniaturizing the sensing unit, can result in environmental friendlier MIP-modified sensors.



Last updated on 2025-27-01 at 19:53