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Endocrine disrupting chemicals in water and recent advances on their detection using electrochemical biosensors

Lue Wang, Haoyun Wang, Chedly Tizaoui Orcid Logo, Yuesuo Yang Orcid Logo, Jafar Ali, Wei Zhang Orcid Logo

Sensors and Diagnostics, Volume: 2, Issue: 1, Pages: 46 - 77

Swansea University Authors: Lue Wang, Chedly Tizaoui Orcid Logo, Wei Zhang Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.1039/d2sd00156j

Abstract

The ever increasing anthropogenic activities have been producing an undesired group of substances called endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), which can pose a serious threat to the health of human beings and wildlife once they are released into natural water environments. Herein, recent advances o...

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Published in: Sensors and Diagnostics
ISSN: 2635-0998
Published: Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) 2022
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa62379
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spelling 2023-02-16T13:14:19.5570958 v2 62379 2023-01-19 Endocrine disrupting chemicals in water and recent advances on their detection using electrochemical biosensors ca3d8fe964ba8806209ab9aa8d67190c Lue Wang Lue Wang true false 4b34a0286d3c0b0b081518fa6987031d 0000-0003-2159-7881 Chedly Tizaoui Chedly Tizaoui true false 3ddabbb54b2cfa2ea10f590ea7da6520 0000-0003-3129-2918 Wei Zhang Wei Zhang true false 2023-01-19 EEEG The ever increasing anthropogenic activities have been producing an undesired group of substances called endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), which can pose a serious threat to the health of human beings and wildlife once they are released into natural water environments. Herein, recent advances on the use of electrochemical biosensors for the determination of EDCs especially in water are thoroughly summarized. Initially, different categories of EDCs with important guidelines are briefly introduced, followed by a simple discussion of non-electrochemical detection methods. Electrochemical techniques including theoretical background and reported studies are then evaluated as the highlight of the review. Finally, current issues, technical bottlenecks, and prospects of this field are critically discussed. This review is composed of following subsections: (i) systematical classification of common EDCs with their toxicities towards human beings and animals, (ii) water contamination events, safety guidelines, and legislations, (iii) non-electrochemical methods for detection of EDCs, (iv) electrochemical monitoring systems, (v) receptors for biorecognition, (vi) detection of EDCs using electrochemical biosensors, and (vii) recent progress, issues, and further development. This review, with a strong interdisciplinary nature, across nanotechnology, biology, material science, and electrochemistry, can offer comprehensive academic assistance for future studies on the detection of EDCs using electrochemical biosensors. Journal Article Sensors and Diagnostics 2 1 46 77 Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) 2635-0998 6 12 2022 2022-12-06 10.1039/d2sd00156j COLLEGE NANME Electronic and Electrical Engineering COLLEGE CODE EEEG Swansea University Not Required 2023-02-16T13:14:19.5570958 2023-01-19T15:21:54.3265126 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Chemical Engineering Lue Wang 1 Haoyun Wang 2 Chedly Tizaoui 0000-0003-2159-7881 3 Yuesuo Yang 0000-0002-1560-4312 4 Jafar Ali 5 Wei Zhang 0000-0003-3129-2918 6 62379__26597__abf191658fd847dd862817ff81d79725.pdf 62379_VoR.pdf 2023-02-16T13:11:49.0136537 Output 2397896 application/pdf Version of Record true This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported Licence. true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
title Endocrine disrupting chemicals in water and recent advances on their detection using electrochemical biosensors
spellingShingle Endocrine disrupting chemicals in water and recent advances on their detection using electrochemical biosensors
Lue Wang
Chedly Tizaoui
Wei Zhang
title_short Endocrine disrupting chemicals in water and recent advances on their detection using electrochemical biosensors
title_full Endocrine disrupting chemicals in water and recent advances on their detection using electrochemical biosensors
title_fullStr Endocrine disrupting chemicals in water and recent advances on their detection using electrochemical biosensors
title_full_unstemmed Endocrine disrupting chemicals in water and recent advances on their detection using electrochemical biosensors
title_sort Endocrine disrupting chemicals in water and recent advances on their detection using electrochemical biosensors
author_id_str_mv ca3d8fe964ba8806209ab9aa8d67190c
4b34a0286d3c0b0b081518fa6987031d
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author_id_fullname_str_mv ca3d8fe964ba8806209ab9aa8d67190c_***_Lue Wang
4b34a0286d3c0b0b081518fa6987031d_***_Chedly Tizaoui
3ddabbb54b2cfa2ea10f590ea7da6520_***_Wei Zhang
author Lue Wang
Chedly Tizaoui
Wei Zhang
author2 Lue Wang
Haoyun Wang
Chedly Tizaoui
Yuesuo Yang
Jafar Ali
Wei Zhang
format Journal article
container_title Sensors and Diagnostics
container_volume 2
container_issue 1
container_start_page 46
publishDate 2022
institution Swansea University
issn 2635-0998
doi_str_mv 10.1039/d2sd00156j
publisher Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
college_str Faculty of Science and Engineering
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hierarchy_parent_id facultyofscienceandengineering
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department_str School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Chemical Engineering{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Chemical Engineering
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description The ever increasing anthropogenic activities have been producing an undesired group of substances called endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), which can pose a serious threat to the health of human beings and wildlife once they are released into natural water environments. Herein, recent advances on the use of electrochemical biosensors for the determination of EDCs especially in water are thoroughly summarized. Initially, different categories of EDCs with important guidelines are briefly introduced, followed by a simple discussion of non-electrochemical detection methods. Electrochemical techniques including theoretical background and reported studies are then evaluated as the highlight of the review. Finally, current issues, technical bottlenecks, and prospects of this field are critically discussed. This review is composed of following subsections: (i) systematical classification of common EDCs with their toxicities towards human beings and animals, (ii) water contamination events, safety guidelines, and legislations, (iii) non-electrochemical methods for detection of EDCs, (iv) electrochemical monitoring systems, (v) receptors for biorecognition, (vi) detection of EDCs using electrochemical biosensors, and (vii) recent progress, issues, and further development. This review, with a strong interdisciplinary nature, across nanotechnology, biology, material science, and electrochemistry, can offer comprehensive academic assistance for future studies on the detection of EDCs using electrochemical biosensors.
published_date 2022-12-06T04:21:57Z
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