About this Research Topic
Pesticide pollution has attracted increasing attention and has become one of the most alarming challenges in recent years. Sensors for pesticides with high sensitivity are urgently required to control food safety, protect the ecosystem, and prevent diseases. Most such sensors are still at laboratory level of testing and verifying proof-of-concept, and have not been incorporated in practical applications. Great research efforts have taken place in recent years in order to develop efficient sensing systems for accurate detection of pesticides in a facile, speedy, sensitive, selective, accurate and user-friendly manner. In improving the performance of sensors, recognition elements, such as enzymes, antibodies, molecularly-imprinted polymers, and aptamers, are required, as well as, advanced signal amplification strategies. By taking advantage of miniaturized devices and wireless networking, the recognition of pesticides can be transformed into a measurable digital signal by hand-held devices, such as smartphones, followed by delivering the detection results to the servers. These efforts will be the focus of the current Research Topic.
This Research Topic will cover new advances in the development of optical and electrochemical sensors for accurate monitoring of pesticides. Original research or review articles dealing with pesticide detection are welcome, including, but not limited to, the following topics:
• Construction of novel optical platform for the detection of pesticides (fluorescence, colorimetric and surface enhanced Raman scattering, surface plasmon resonance, chemiluminescent strategies and so on)
• Design of electrochemical sensors, including electrochemical, electrochemiluminescence and photoelectrochemical strategies.
• Development new recognition elements (nanozymes, molecularly imprinted polymers, aptamer, nanobodies, peptides, etc.)
• Applications of functional materials (0 to 3 dimensional materials) to pesticide sensing
• Field-deployable devices or hand-held devices for on-site monitoring of pesticides.
Keywords: Pesticides, Optical sensor, Electrochemical sensor, Recognition unit, Trace analysis
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.