[Magnetic ion imprinting techniques for the separation and analysis of elemental speciation]

Se Pu. 2022 Nov;40(11):979-987. doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1123.2022.07013.
[Article in Chinese]

Abstract

Metal and metalloid elements have various possible isotopic compositions and oxidation states and often form coordination or covalent compounds with inorganic and organic small molecules or biological macromolecules, resulting in complex elemental speciation. Different species of the same element often have different properties, which dictate their behavior. Thus, elemental speciation analysis is vital for comprehensively and accurately assessing an element's environmental and biological effects and the corresponding risks. Because elemental speciation determines the behavior of an element in different environmental and biological processes, the analysis of elemental species has, in recent years, been important in various subjects, including analytical chemistry, environmental chemistry, geochemistry, ecology, agronomy, and biomedicine. The complexity of environmental and biological sample matrices, as well as the multiformity, low levels, and lability of chemical forms pose severe challenges in elemental speciation analysis. Therefore, the highly selective identification and efficient separation of native species is necessary for conducting the identification, quantification, ecotoxicity evaluation, and physiological function study of elemental speciation. Sample pretreatment by solid-phase extraction is an effective solution to the aforementioned problems, but the existing methods do not meet the requirements of current research. The transition of the target species from pre-processing to the detection device includes both on- and off-line arrangements. Compared with the on-line approach, the off-line approach requires more manual participation, increasing the analysis workload. However, the off-line approach can improve the analysis efficiency through high-throughput pretreatment when large batches of samples are encountered, meaning the off-line approach is still an effective model. Ion imprinting technology has been developed based on existing molecular imprinting technology, with four main steps present in the synthesis of ion imprinted polymers. First, ion imprinting technology uses metal ions as templates. Then, these templates are combined with the functional monomers through coordination, electrostatic or hydrogen bonding. The functional monomers simultaneously surround and fix the templates, after which the cross-linkers and functional monomers polymerize to prepare ion-imprinted polymers with a specific structure and composition. Finally, the imprinted holes are created in the polymers by eluting the template ions. Therefore, the template molecules, functional monomers, and cross-linkers are three precursors necessary for synthesizing ion-imprinted polymers. These polymers can specifically bind to the imprinted metal ions with accuracy, sensitivity, and reliability. In recent years, they have been widely used in separating, enriching, analyzing, and detecting elemental species. During solid-phase extraction, the non-magnetic adsorbent materials dispersed in the sample solution need to be separated by centrifugation or filtration, which is time-consuming and laborious. Because an external magnetic field can be used for rapid magnetic solid-phase extraction, it has become a potential method for separating and enriching elemental species. This review systematically summarizes the latest progress in ion-imprinting technology, including its principle and the preparation methods of ion-imprinted polymers. The challenges faced by ion imprinting technology are analyzed in the context of the development of ion-imprinting magnetic solid-phase extraction in elemental speciation analysis. Finally, the direction of future development and the strategies of ion imprinting technology in elemental speciation analysis are proposed. It is important to exploit novel organic-inorganic hybrid polymerization-based multifunctional ion-imprinted magnetic nanocomposites for the magnetic solid-phase extraction and separation of elemental species. By establishing the pretreatment protocols with high recognition selectivity, strong separation ability, large adsorption capacity, and good speciation stability, we expect to achieve the research objectives of simultaneously separating and enriching the multiple-species of typical metal/metalloid elements in environmental and biological samples.

元素的形态决定了其在环境和生物过程中的不同行为,形态分析正在被分析化学、环境化学、地球化学、生态学、农学和生物医学等众多学科所关注。环境和生物样品基质复杂、化学形态多样、含量低且易转化是元素形态分析面临的挑战,因此对元素形态的甄别、定量、生态毒性评价和生理功能研究需要对原生形态进行高选择性识别和高效率分离。固相萃取是一种有效应对以上难题的方法,但现有材料和方法远不能满足要求。离子印迹聚合物可与印迹金属离子特异性结合,具有准确、灵敏、可靠的特点,近年来在元素形态分离富集和分析检测方面得到了较为广泛的应用。鉴于非磁性吸附剂在固相萃取操作时,需要将分散在样品溶液中的吸附材料经过离心或过滤分离,操作比较繁琐费时,而磁性材料易被外部磁场快速分离,因此操作简便快速的磁固相萃取正成为元素形态分离富集中一种极具潜力的方法。这篇综述系统总结了离子印迹技术的最新进展,包括离子印迹技术的原理、离子印迹聚合物的制备方法,并根据元素形态分析中离子印迹磁固相萃取的发展现状,分析了离子印迹技术所面临的挑战,最后对元素形态分析中离子印迹技术的未来发展方向和策略提出了建议,提出开发基于有机-无机杂化聚合的多功能磁性离子印迹纳米复合物用于样品的前处理是建立识别选择性高、分离能力强、吸附容量大、形态稳定性好的形态分析方法的一种重要举措。

Keywords: elemental speciation; enrichment; ion imprinting technology; review; separation; solid-phase extraction.

Publication types

  • Review
  • English Abstract

MeSH terms

  • Adsorption
  • Humans
  • Ions
  • Metalloids*
  • Metals
  • Molecular Imprinting* / methods
  • Polymers / chemistry
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Solid Phase Extraction / methods

Substances

  • Polymers
  • Ions
  • Metals
  • Metalloids