Tag Archive for: chemical

A Reagent spray bottle spraying from the right

Lead contamination and exposure can cause “ profound and permanent ” impacts, including brain damage in children, and increased risk of kidney damage, cardiovascular disease, and miscarriage, according to the World Health Organization.

Lead Detection Breakthrough: Green Fluorescent Light with Spray-on Detector

While known contamination is relatively easy to mitigate, the detection itself can be a tricky proposition. Standard methods can only detect lead if it’s isolated and concentrated first.

Now, researchers at Amolf, a research institute dedicated to studying the physics of matter, have developed a spray-on reagent that signals the presence of even tiny amounts of lead by lighting up fluorescent green under a UV light within seconds. Comprised of methyl ammonium bromide in isopropanol, it reacts with lead to form a photoluminescent lead bromide perovskite (Environ. Sci. Technol. 2023, DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.3c06058) .

Read the full article on cen.acs.org
lead detection spray green light

You’ve probably heard about potential lead contamination in tumblers, drinking water, chocolate, packaged lunches, and even baby food. The cause for concern is justified. Lead is a potent neurotoxin, and there’s no safe level to ingest. The metal is particularly harmful to childhood development.

The good news is that in the United States, lead can no longer be added to many common products. Consequently, instances of lead poisoning among children have declined significantly over the past several decades.

Yet lead still persists on stuff we come into contact with every day, like old paint, dishes, and water pipes. Lead can also show up in food products and cosmetics via contamination. This often happens in cheap imported goods from countries with fewer regulations.

Unfortunately, if you are curious or concerned about lead being in something you own, most home-testing options are limited. Even tests recognized by the Environmental Protection Agency have been difficult to use. They are often prone to user error and expensive per test.

A New Method for Instant Lead Detection

But what if an instant, easy-to-use, precise, and readily available test existed? Imagine a test that allowed users to conduct literally hundreds of tests at a much lower cost than traditional methods.

I had this question until I came upon a method that produces a neon-green glow when the metal is present. You also may have seen lead-safety influencers popping up on your social media feeds promoting different ways of testing at home. One such method is Lumetallix. The company sells a simple kit comprising a spray or droplet bottle and a UV flashlight. Just spritz or drop some testing liquid onto a surface, and then pass a UV light over it. If the surface glows neon green, then the surface contains lead.

Before you start scanning your vintage glassware and chipping paint, however, there are a few important things to remember about this method. These tips will help you test strategically to keep you and your loved ones safe.

DIY lead test results with little user error

The problem with testing for lead at home is that most tests on the market have a high cost per test. They’re also time-consuming and fiddly, requiring swabs, pipettes, or test tubes. They can occasionally deliver inaccurate results. Furthermore, they can’t detect lead at very low thresholds that may still pose a health risk.

For years, the most widely available EPA-recognized lead test was 3M’s LeadCheck. This was a tube that you crack to activate, rub onto the test surface, and watch for a color change. For EPA recognition, this test required a professional to administer it.

3M no longer manufactures this test, but cheaper versions are widely available on Amazon. They typically contain an orange-yellow swab of the same chemical. However, they are known for being unreliable, as The New York Times reported during the Stanley tumbler scare in January 2024.

Although the neon-green testing method used by Lumetallix is not yet EPA-recognized, it purportedly produces no false positives. This is because the solution reacts only with lead. This method can detect as little as a single nanogram of lead. This makes it significantly more sensitive than swab tests, according to Lumetallix.

The test’s signature glow is due to a compound called methylammonium bromide in the kit’s spray or droplet bottle. Wim Noorduin, a chemist at the Dutch research center AMOLF, helped develop Lumetallix. He told me in a video interview that this colorless salt bonds with lead crystals to form a kind of compound known as a perovskite. These perovskites act as a semiconductor and glow green when you expose them to UV light.

According to Noorduin, these methylammonium bromide tests are 10 times more sensitive than the D-Lead two-part solution tests recognized by the EPA.

Read the full article on www.nytimes.com
Lead remains a hidden