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Simple sonochemical synthesis of novel grass-like vanadium disulfide: A viable non-enzymatic electrochemical sensor for the detection of hydrogen peroxide.

Design and fabrication of novel inorganic nanomaterials for the low-level detection of food preservative chemicals significant is of interest to the researchers. In the present work, we have developed a novel grass-like vanadium disulfide (GL-VS2 ) through a simple sonochemical method without surfactants or templates. As-prepared VS2 was used as an electrocatalyst for reduction of hydrogen peroxide (H2 O2 ). The crystalline nature, surface morphology, elemental compositions and binding energy of the as-prepared VS2 were analyzed by X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy, field-emission scanning electron microscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The electrochemical studies show that the GL-VS2 modified glassy carbon electrode (GL-VS2 /GCE) has a superior electrocatalytic activity and lower-reduction potential than the response observed for unmodified GCE. Furthermore, the GL-VS2 /GCE displayed a wide linear response range (0.1-260 μM), high sensitivity (0.23 μA μM-1  cm-2 ), lower detection limit (26 nM) and excellent selectivity for detection of H2 O2 . The fabricated GL-VS2 /GCE showed excellent practical ability for detection of H2 O2 in milk and urine samples, revealing the real-time practical applicability of the sensor in food contaminants.

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