▎ 摘 要
A one-pot method based on cyclic voltammetric scan was used to fabricate a glassy carbon electrode modified with nanocomposites consisting of poly(thionine) and amino-functionalized graphene quantum dots (afGQDs). Under near-neutral conditions, the dye polymer was effectively oxidized by hydroxyl radicals (center dot OH) that were derived from the copper-catalyzed Fenton-like reaction, and the cathodic peak current on the modified electrode greatly increased. The reaction of Cu2+ with thiourea (TU) and the generation of a complex, CuTU2+, led to the decrease of Cu2+/Cu+ species, which inhibited the Fenton-like reaction and reduced the electrochemical response change. Due to a displacement reaction, the addition of Hg2+ into the H2O2-Cu2+-TU system resulted in the release of cuprous ions that benefited the Fenton-like reaction. Under the following optimal conditions: 6 mg mL(-1) afGQDs and the 25-cycle potential cycling for the fabrication of the modified electrode, pH 6.5, and the cCu2+/cTU ratio of 1.0, the increasing extent of the cathodic peak current exhibited a good linear response to the logarithm of the Hg2+ concentration in the range of 1 pM-1 mu M with a detection limit of 0.6 pM. Mercury ions in a water sample were determined with good recovery, ranging from 97 to 103%. The investigation on the uptake of Hg2+ into human vascular endothelial cells, HUVEC, shows that the cells incubated in the high-concentration glucose medium absorbed more mercury ions than HUVEC incubated in the normal medium. As a result, Hg2+ could lead to the greater damage to the former. Graphical abstract