Single atom dispersed tungsten disulfide (WS2) based nanosensors for VOCs detection related to decomposed humans in disaster events

IF 5.9 3区 材料科学 Q2 CHEMISTRY, PHYSICAL
Maiken Ueland , Hyeonhu Bae , Anan Udomkijmongkol , Komsilp Kotmool , Vandana Gulati , Tanveer Hussain
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Locating and recovering the victims as a result of disaster events is extremely challenging due to vast search areas, hazardous nature of destroyed infrastructure, and large number of potential victims. An effective avenue for the victim’s detection is through the sensing of human-specific volatile organic compounds (VOCs) emitted both in life and in death. Motivated by this, we employed first principles density functional theory (DFT) calculations to study the sensing properties of pristine, vacancy-induced and single atom dispersed tungsten disulfide (WS2) monolayers towards 11 specific VOCs associated with decomposing humans. We found that pristine, and vacancy-induced WS2 weakly adsorbed the selected VOCs with adsorption energies (Eads) between −0.26 to −0.76 eV. However, the incorporation of selected single atoms of Co, Fe, Nb, and Ni in WS2 improved the sensing properties tremendously. In particular, Nb-WS2 adsorbed the incident VOCs with Eads values of −1.89, −209, −1.43, −0.94, −2.08, −1.57, −1.44, −1.47, −1.70, −1.03, and −2.14 eV for 2-Butanone, benzaldehyde, butanol, heptane, hexanal, methylamine, dimethyl disulfide, dimethyl trisulfide, pyridine, octane, and toluene, respectively, which are ideal for efficient sensing mechanism. Appropriate adsorptions were coupled with the measurable changes in the electronic properties (band gaps) of Nb-WS2, which is essential for proficient sensing. Charge transfer analysis, electro localization functions, electrostatic potentials, and work function calculations further authenticated the sensing propensities of single atom dispersed WS2. Finally, Langmuir adsorption model was employed to explore the sensing at diverse pressure and temperature settings. We believe that these results will help for the development of highly efficient nanosensors for the detection of VOCs related to decomposed humans in mass disaster events. This will increase the detection ability and the chance of locating these victims.

Abstract Image

基于单原子分散二硫化钨 (WS2) 的纳米传感器,用于检测灾难事件中与人体分解有关的挥发性有机化合物
由于搜索区域广阔、被毁基础设施具有危险性以及潜在受害者数量众多,因此在灾难事件中定位和找回受害者极具挑战性。探测遇难者的一个有效途径是感知人在生前和死后释放的特定挥发性有机化合物(VOCs)。受此启发,我们采用第一原理密度泛函理论(DFT)计算,研究了原始、空位诱导和单原子分散的二硫化钨(WS2)单层对 11 种与人体分解相关的特定挥发性有机化合物的传感特性。我们发现,原始 WS2 和空位诱导 WS2 对所选挥发性有机化合物的吸附很弱,吸附能(Eads)在 -0.26 至 -0.76 eV 之间。然而,在 WS2 中加入选定的 Co、Fe、Nb 和 Ni 单原子后,其传感性能得到了极大改善。特别是,Nb-WS2 吸附入射挥发性有机化合物的 Eads 值分别为-1.89、-209、-1.43、-0.94、-2.08、-1.57、-1.44、-1.47、-1.70、-1.03 和-2。分别为 2-丁酮、苯甲醛、丁醇、庚烷、己醛、甲胺、二甲基二硫化物、二甲基三硫化物、吡啶、辛烷和甲苯的 -2.14 eV,这是理想的高效传感机制。适当的吸附与 Nb-WS2 的电子特性(带隙)的可测量变化相结合,这对于熟练传感至关重要。电荷转移分析、电定位功能、静电势和功函数计算进一步证实了单原子分散 WS2 的传感特性。最后,我们采用朗缪尔吸附模型来探讨不同压力和温度条件下的传感。我们相信,这些结果将有助于开发高效的纳米传感器,用于检测大规模灾难事件中与人体分解有关的挥发性有机化合物。这将提高检测能力,增加找到这些受害者的机会。
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来源期刊
FlatChem
FlatChem Multiple-
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
6.50%
发文量
104
审稿时长
26 days
期刊介绍: FlatChem - Chemistry of Flat Materials, a new voice in the community, publishes original and significant, cutting-edge research related to the chemistry of graphene and related 2D & layered materials. The overall aim of the journal is to combine the chemistry and applications of these materials, where the submission of communications, full papers, and concepts should contain chemistry in a materials context, which can be both experimental and/or theoretical. In addition to original research articles, FlatChem also offers reviews, minireviews, highlights and perspectives on the future of this research area with the scientific leaders in fields related to Flat Materials. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following: -Design, synthesis, applications and investigation of graphene, graphene related materials and other 2D & layered materials (for example Silicene, Germanene, Phosphorene, MXenes, Boron nitride, Transition metal dichalcogenides) -Characterization of these materials using all forms of spectroscopy and microscopy techniques -Chemical modification or functionalization and dispersion of these materials, as well as interactions with other materials -Exploring the surface chemistry of these materials for applications in: Sensors or detectors in electrochemical/Lab on a Chip devices, Composite materials, Membranes, Environment technology, Catalysis for energy storage and conversion (for example fuel cells, supercapacitors, batteries, hydrogen storage), Biomedical technology (drug delivery, biosensing, bioimaging)
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