4.7 Article

Rational construction of a robust metal-organic framework nanozyme with dual-metal active sites for colorimetric detection of organophosphorus pesticides

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 423, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.127253

Keywords

Nanozyme; Bimetallic MOF; Colorimetry; Organophosphorus pesticides; Visual detection

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21675127]
  2. Development Project of Qinghai Provincial Key Laboratory [2017-ZJ-Y10]
  3. Capacity Building Project of Engineering Research Center of Qinghai Province [2017-GX-G03]

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The introduction of manganese ions led to the successful preparation of a bimetallic Mn/Fe-MIL(53) MOF nanozyme with superior catalytic performance for rapid detection of organophosphorus pesticides. The study revealed the mechanism behind the material's superior catalytic activity and developed a simple, selective, and sensitive colorimetric detection strategy.
While nanomaterials with enzyme-mimicking activities are emerging as promising candidates in the colorimetric detection of organophosphorus pesticides (OPs), the catalytic activities and recognition ability to analyte of most nanozymes are inherently deficient. In this work, we introduced manganese ions into a typical iron based MOF (Fe-MIL(53)) via a one-pot hydrothermal reaction strategy, which brought out a catalytically favorable bimetallic Mn/Fe-MIL(53) MOF nanozyme. The catalytic performance of Mn/Fe-MIL(53) is superior to that of pure Fe-MIL (53) and the mechanism for superior catalytic activity of material is revealed by active species scavenging experiments and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Besides, the introduction of manganese endows the material with the characteristic of being specially destroyed by choline, which motivates the establishment of a simple, selective and sensitive colorimetric strategy for OPs detection. The proposed colorimetric strategy could quantify the methyl parathion and chlorpyrifos in the concentration range of 10-120 nM and 5-50 nM, respectively. The low detection limit of 2.8 nM for methyl parathion and 0.95 nM (3 S/N) for chlorpyrifos were achieved. Good recoveries were obtained when applied in the real sample detection. Our work paves the way to boost catalytic performance of MOF nanozymes, which will be useful in biosensing.

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