IIT-Guwahati team creates nanosensor for detecting cancer-causing water pollutants
Press Trust of India | September 1, 2025 | 05:45 PM IST | 1 min read
IIT-Guwahati: According to the official statement, the sensor can detect mercury and harmful antibiotic contamination in less than 10 seconds, using the carbon dots and ultraviolet lights.
GUWAHATI: Researchers at IIT-Guwahati have developed nanosenor from milk protein and thymine for instant detection of cancer-causing water pollutants, the institute said on Monday. Using carbon dots and ultraviolet lights, the sensor can detect mercury and harmful antibiotic contamination in less than 10 seconds, it said.
With rapid urbanisation, industrial activities and overuse of pharmaceuticals, water contamination is becoming a pressing issue, putting ecosystems and human health at risk worldwide, the institute said in a statement.
Tetracyclines are a class of antibiotics commonly used for pneumonia and respiratory infections. If it is not disposed properly, it can easily enter the environment, contaminating the water, which can result in antibiotic resistance and other health hazards.
Similarly, mercury, in its organic form, can cause cancer, neurological disorders, cardiovascular disease and other life-threatening conditions, it said. Detecting these pollutants accurately and quickly is essential to protect both water quality and public health.
Also read IIT Guwahati to establish Manekshaw Centres for defence research at IIITs, NITs, IITs
IIT-Guwahati team creates nanosensor
To address this challenge, the IIT-Guwahati research team has created nanosensor, a sensor built from extremely small materials that are a few billionths of a metre in size, according to the statement. The sensor uses carbon dots that glow under ultraviolet light. In the presence of harmful substances such as mercury or tetracyclines, the glow of these carbon dots dim, providing a quick and visible signal of contamination, it said.
To ensure its versatile utility, the researchers have tested the sensor in a variety of environments such as tap and river water, milk, urine and serum samples, IIT-Guwahati said. The research is at a laboratory stage and the findings are subject to further validation, the statement added.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- From CBSE to IB Board: DPS International principal on why parents want a curriculum beyond rote learning
- From carpentry labs to language classes, NEP promises big but are Indian schools ready to deliver?
- The KGBV Plight: How underpaid teachers, slashed budgets, and empty seats are plaguing govt’s flagship scheme
- MoUs with IISc Bangalore, IIT Bombay, AICTE; 300 scholarships for Indians key highlights of India-Canada meet
- PMKVY 4.0 meets just 15% of target, MSDE plans version 5.0 with skill vouchers, outcome bonds, APAAR Id link
- DPS Mathura Road principal: School board exams life’s easiest tests; CBSE no less than international boards
- Scrap TS EAMCET for BTech admissions, overhaul JNTUH affiliation, grade engineering colleges: Telangana panel
- Private NGOs are revamping anganwadis into proper preschools, but funding and fairness gap persists
- West Bengal: At this school, tradition meets innovation and education ‘extends beyond marks’
- DPS RK Puram principal: ‘CBSE board exams twice a year will have students spending entire year in tests’