IIT Guwahati's Nanocrystals Detect Trace Mercury

Karmactive Team

Scientists at IIT Guwahati developed tiny glowing crystals that flash bright green signals when detecting toxic mercury in water and food supplies.

Photo Source: Belikov Maxim (CC BY 4.0)

These specialized perovskite crystals, measuring 100,000 times tinier than human hair, catch mercury traces down to nanomolar levels with precise accuracy.

Photo Source: Argonne National labourtary (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

The research team solved moisture sensitivity by wrapping detection crystals in waterproof silica-polymer coating, making them durable for long-term usage.

Photo Source: Maren Roman (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Live cell testing proves these nanocrystals safe for biological systems, opening paths for tracking metal toxicity in human body environments.

Photo Source: Umberto Salvag  (CC BY 2.0)

The scientific journals - Materials Today Chemistry and Journal of Materials Chemistry C published this breakthrough mercury detection research.

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Prof. Saikat Bhaumik leads this cost-effective detection method, making mercury screening available across multiple testing environments.

Photo Source: Yakuzakorat (CC BY 4.0)

These specialized crystals show capabilities to detect other dangerous metals while tracking medicine movement through human systems for safer treatments.

Photo Source: Daniel Foster (CC BY-NC 2.0)

Eight researchers across IIT Guwahati and NISER Bhubaneswar contributed to developing this mercury detection technology through collaborative effort.

Photo Source: Nestlé (CC BY-NC 2.0)