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Hypersensitive electrochemical sensor based on thermally annealed gold–silver alloy nanoporous matrices for the simultaneous determination of sulfathiazole and sulfamethoxazole residues in food samples
In this study, we have developed a novel, hypersensitive, and ultraselective electrochemical sensor containing thermally annealed gold–silver alloy nanoporous matrices (TA-Au-Ag-ANpM) integrated with f -MWCNTs-CPE and poly( l -serine) nanocomposites for the simultaneous detection of sulfathiazole (SFT) and sulfamethoxazole (SFM) residues in honey, beef, and egg samples. TA-Au-Ag-ANpM/ f -MWCNTs-CPE/poly( l -serine) was characterized using an extensive array of analytical (UV–Vis, FT-IR, XRD , SEM , and EDX), and electrochemical (EIS, CV and SWV) techniques. It exhibited outstanding performance over a wide linear range, from 4.0 pM to 490 μM for SFT and 4.0 pM to 520 μM for SFM, with picomolar detection and quantification limits (0.53 pM and 1.75 pM for SFT, 0.41 pM and 1.35 pM for SFM, respectively). The sensor demonstrated exceptional repeatability, reproducibility, and anti-interference capability, with percentage recovery of 95.6–102.4% in food samples and RSD below 5%. Therefore, the developed sensor is an ideal tool to address the current antibiotic residue crisis in food sources.