Ultrasensitive detection of toxic cations through changes in the tunnelling current across films of striped nanoparticles

Although multiple methods have been developed to detect metal cations, only a few offer sensitivities below 1 pM, and many require complicated procedures and sophisticated equipment. Here, we describe a class of simple solid-state sensors for the ultrasensitive detection of heavy-metal cations (nota...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nat Mater 2012-11, Vol.11 (11), p.978-985
Hauptverfasser: Cho, Eun Seon, Kim, Jiwon, Tejerina, Baudilio, Hermans, Thomas M., Jiang, Hao, Nakanishi, Hideyuki, Yu, Miao, Patashinski, Alexander Z., Glotzer, Sharon C., Stellacci, Francesco, Grzybowski, Bartosz A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although multiple methods have been developed to detect metal cations, only a few offer sensitivities below 1 pM, and many require complicated procedures and sophisticated equipment. Here, we describe a class of simple solid-state sensors for the ultrasensitive detection of heavy-metal cations (notably, an unprecedented attomolar limit for the detection of CH 3 Hg + in both standardized solutions and environmental samples) through changes in the tunnelling current across films of nanoparticles (NPs) protected with striped monolayers of organic ligands. The sensors are also highly selective because of the ligand–shell organization of the NPs. On binding of metal cations, the electronic structure of the molecular bridges between proximal NPs changes, the tunnelling current increases and highly conductive paths ultimately percolate the entire film. The nanoscale heterogeneity of the structure of the film broadens the range of the cation-binding constants, which leads to wide sensitivity ranges (remarkably, over 18 orders of magnitude in CH 3 Hg + concentration). Solid-state sensors for the detection of heavy-metal cations require for the most part sophisticated chemistry and equipment. It is now shown that toxic cations in environmental samples can be detected with ultrahigh sensitivity and over a broad range of cation concentrations by measuring the tunnelling current across films of nanoparticles decorated with striped monolayers of organic ligands.
ISSN:1476-1122
1476-4660
DOI:10.1038/nmat3406