Quantifying Citrate Surface Ligands on Iron Oxide Nanoparticles with TGA, CHN Analysis, NMR, and RP-HPLC with UV Detection

Author(s)
Anna Matiushkina, Sarah-Luise Abram, Isabella Tavernaro, Robert Richstein, Michael R Reithofer, Elina Andresen, Matthias Michaelis, Matthias Koch, Ute Resch-Genger
Abstract

Although citrate is frequently used as a surface ligand for nanomaterials (NMs) such as metal, metal oxide, and lanthanide-based NMs in hydrophilic environments due to its biocompatibility and simple replacement by other more strongly binding ligands in postsynthetic surface modification reactions, its quantification on NM surfaces has rarely been addressed. Here, we present a multimethod approach for citrate quantification on iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) broadly applied in the life and material sciences. Methods explored include thermogravimetric (TGA) and elemental (CHN) analysis, providing citrate-nonspecific information on the IONP coating, simple photometry, and citrate-selective reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) with absorption (UV) detection and quantitative nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (qNMR). Challenges originating from the strongly absorbing magnetic NM and paramagnetic iron species interfering with optical and NMR methods were overcome by suitable sample preparation workflows. Our multimethod approach to citrate quantification highlights the advantages of combining specific and unspecific methods for characterizing NM surface chemistry and method cross-validation. It also demonstrates that chemically nonselective measurements can favor an overestimation of the amount of a specific surface ligand by signal contributions from molecules remaining on the NM surface, e.g., from particle synthesis, such as initially employed ligands and/or surfactants. Our results emphasize the potential of underexplored selective RP-HPLC for quantifying ligands on NMs, which does not require a multistep sample preparation workflow such as qNMR for many NMs and provides a higher sensitivity. These findings can pave the road to future applications of versatile HPLC methods in NM characterization.

Organisation(s)
Department of Inorganic Chemistry
External organisation(s)
Freie Universität Berlin (FU), Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing
Journal
Analytical Chemistry
Volume
97
Pages
19627-19634
No. of pages
8
ISSN
0003-2700
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.5c03024
Publication date
09-2025
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
104002 Analytical chemistry
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/c0a58470-af23-4de8-afb0-2f4cd0180df3