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Empirical limits of detection (LOD) for CWA simulants on the benchtop MS ranged from 100 ppt to 750 ppb and were highly dependant on solid matrix composition, with the portable system yielding similar spectral data from alike matrices, albeit with lower sensitivity.Multiple analytical techniques were used to characterize materials from the surfaces of two African sculptures in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago a Bamana power object (boli), and a Yoruba wooden sculpture of a female figure. Surface accretions on objects such as these have received relatively little scientific attention to elucidate their composition and function, in part because they are made with complex mixtures of natural materials, which are often unfamiliar and poorly represented in the scientific literature on artists' materials. For this reason, a complement of techniques including Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and pyrolysis gas chromatography mass spectrometry were applied, along with shotgun proteomics to better understand the nature and biological origin, down to the species level, of the proteinaceous materials. The results highlighted the presence of diverse materials including plant resins, oils, polysaccharides, and inorganic (clay or earth) compounds. In particular, mass spectrometry-based proteomics provided new insights on proteinaceous components, allowing us to identify the presence of sacrificial blood, and more specifically, blood from chicken, goat, sheep and dog. This new scientific evidence supports and supplements knowledge derived from curatorial and field work studies, and opens new doors to understanding the objects' significance and history of use.Herein, we report the fabrication of NiO-CoO films for the electrochemical detection of hydrazine. An electrochemical sensor was devised where aerosol assisted chemical vapor deposition (AACVD) was employed as a nifty method for synthesizing NiO-CoO films over FTO electrodes. NiO-CoO-nanoparticle (NP) and NiO-CoO-nanowall (NW) films were fabricated over FTO substrates. The electrocatalytic analysis was performed in a standard three-electrode electrochemical setup. NiO-CoO-NW/FTO showed enhanced electro-oxidation for hydrazine at all concentrations tested. XRD, XPS, EDX, and FE-SEM techniques were used to characterize the structural, morphological, and elemental properties of NiO-CoO films. The results showed improved sensitivity, a large dynamic range, and good long-term stability of NiO-CoO-NW films. The amperometric response was used to measure the detection limit, and it was as low as 0.01 μM, and the sensitivity is ∼33 μA μM-1 cm-2. Besides, the NiO-CoO-NW/FTO electrodes showed significant selectivity towards hydrazine upon testing cross-sensitivity to other common interfering molecules. This strategy of using NiO-CoO-NW/FTO electrodes prepared via AACVD has great potential for the direct determination of hydrazine in environmental sensing applications.Many organic compounds undergo changes under the influence of light. This might be beneficial in, for example, water purification, but undesirable when cultural-heritage objects fade or when food ingredients (e.g., vitamins) degrade. It is often challenging to establish a strong link between photodegradation products and their parent molecules due to the complexity of the sample. To allow effective study of light-induced degradation (LID), a low-volume exposure cell was created in which solutes are efficiently illuminated (especially at low concentrations) while simultaneously analysed by absorbance spectroscopy. selleck chemicals llc The new LID cell encompasses a gas-permeable liquid-core waveguide (LCW) connected to a spectrograph allowing collection of spectral data in real-time. The aim of the current study was to evaluate the overall performance of the LID cell by assessing its transmission characteristics, the absolute photon flux achieved in the LCW, and its capacity to study solute degradation in presence of oxygen. The potential of the LID set-up for light-exposure studies was successfully demonstrated by monitoring the degradation of the dyes eosin Y and crystal violet.For aptamer-modified nanomaterial biosensors label-free detection methods are desirable due to them being simple and low in cost. Among these methods, nanomaterial aggregation for signal conversion is common, using materials such as gold nanoparticles. However, for MoS2 nanosheets (MoS2-NSs), signal conversion of its aggregation is difficult, resulting in the limited development of its label-free sensing applications. Herein, for the first time, the extinction spectrum has been employed to quickly transform the signal of MoS2-NS aggregation and reveal the size-dependent extinction response of MoS2-NS aggregation. Moreover, the size-dependent optical extinction behavior of MoS2-NSs, using aptamers to induce the dispersion of the MoS2-NSs and greatly improve their ability to identify targets, is studied. Importantly, this method has been employed to achieve the label-free detection of Escherichia coli O157H7. The present investigation shows the promising use of MoS2-NSs for the development of label-free detection.Thiodiglycol (TDG) is a synthetic precursor and an environmental degradation product of sulfur mustard (HD). Consequently, its presence can be indicative of illicit preparation or historical presence of chemical weapons, but its lower toxicity lends itself to use as an HD simulant for testing and method development. Detection of TDG vapor often proves elusive with existing techniques exhibiting undesirably high detection limits in the gas phase (>ppm). Moreover, traditional approaches to detecting TDG vapor rely upon non-specific approaches that do not provide the certainty afforded by mass spectrometry. Using atmospheric flow tube mass spectrometry (AFT-MS), which has previously demonstrated the capacity to detect parts-per-quadrillion levels of vapor, we evaluate the capacity of this approach for non-contact residue analysis based upon TDG vapor sampling and nitrate clustering chemistry. Furthermore, we discuss challenges with ambient vapor detection using the AFT-MS system and associated observations related to TDG degradation into 2,2'-sulfonyldiglycol from exposure to ambient conditions with vapor detection being possible even after 7-weeks of sample aging.