4.7 Article

Nitrogenated holey graphene (C2N) surface as highly selective electrochemical sensor for ammonia

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR LIQUIDS
Volume 296, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.molliq.2019.111929

Keywords

Nitrogenated holey graphene (C2N); Density functional theory; Electrochemical sensor; Ammonia selective

Funding

  1. Higher Education Commission of Pakistan [1899, 2469, 2981]
  2. COMSATS University Islamabad (Abbottabad Campus)

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Electron rich nitrogenated holey graphene C(2)N(-)h(2)D material with controlled pore size is explored as an efficient sensor and adsorption material for toxic and warfare agents (NH3, H2S, PH3, HCN and HF, NF3, NCI3, COCl2). The adsorption of all analytes on C2N surface is evaluated by using adsorption energy, non-covalent interactions, quantum theory of atoms in molecule, symmetry adopted perturbation theory, natural bond orbital (NBO), and frontier molecular orbital (FMOs) analysis. For studied analytes, adsorption energy ranges from -21.56 to -6.91 kcal/mol. SAPTO analysis shows that electrostatic factor remains dominant in hydrogen containing analytes, while dispersion factor is dominant in halogen containing analytes. The SAPTO results corroborate nicely with the results of adsorption energy expect for NF3. The least value of SAPTO resulted due to enhanced repulsive part of NF3@C2N complex. The HOMO-WMO energy gaps for PH3@C2N (3.42 eV), H2S@C2N (2.84 eV) and NH3@C2N (2.52 eV) are consistent with the results of interaction energy and SAPTO analysis. FMO analysis reveals that a significant decrease in HOMO-LUMO energy gap is observed when charge is shifted from analytes to C2N surfaces. Among eight analytes efficient lowering of HOMO-LUMO energy gap (2.52 eV) is observed for NH3@C2N. Thus, C2N is a potential candidate for sensing and trapping of H2S and NH3 analytes. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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