4.6 Article

Aim and shoot: molecule-imprinting polymer coated MoO3 for selective SERS detection and photocatalytic destruction of low-level organic contaminants

Journal

RSC ADVANCES
Volume 7, Issue 58, Pages 36201-36207

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7ra05547a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21673073, U140710223, 21377038]
  2. National Basic Research Program of China (973 Program) [2013CB632403]
  3. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [14230710500, 16JC1401400]
  4. Petro-China Innovation Foundation [2015D-5006-0402]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

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A sensitive and selective SERS sensor with easy and excellent recyclability is highly demanded because of its great potential application in complex detection environments. Here, using methylene blue (MB) as a model target, a semiconductor-based SERS substrate composed of a MoO3 nanorod core and a uniform molecule-imprinting polymethacrylic acid shell (MIP) with a thickness of 4 nm was designed and fabricated (MoO3@ MIP) to achieve selective detection. The key to the successful coating of the ultrathin uniform MIP shell lies in the pretreatment of a MoO3 core with nitric acid, providing sufficient surficial hydroxyls for the anchoring of a polymer precursor. The molecule-imprinted voids for MB were formed simply via light irradiation as a result of photocatalytic degradation by a MoO3 semiconductor. This core-shell MIP composite shows a high SERS selectivity towards low-level MB in a mixed MB/CV solution. The enhanced factor (EF) is high, at 1.6 X 10(4). More importantly, the selective detection allows the further photocatalytic recycling of MoO3@ MIP in an aim-and-shoot way, which well preserves the detection selectivity and sensitivity towards MB at least for 4 cycles. Based on decreased sensitivity with the increasing shell thickness (10-24 nm), a MIP-gating charge transfer mechanism is proposed to demonstrate the high EF instead of the molecule-enrichment effect. This aim-and-shoot strategy is expected to push forward the prosperous application of selective SERS for trace detection in versatile environments.

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