Single-Atom Iron Anchored on 2-D Graphene Carbon to Realize Bridge-Adsorption of O-O as Biomimetic Enzyme for Remarkably Sensitive Electrochemical Detection of H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>.
Juan LiChao WuChengsong YuanZhuanzhuan ShiKaiyue ZhangZhuo ZouLulu XiongJie ChenYali JiangWei SunKanglai TangHongbin YangChang Ming LiPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2022)
Single-atom catalysis is mainly focused on its dispersed high-density catalytic sites, but delicate designs to realize a unique catalysis mechanism in terms of target reactions have been much less investigated. Herein an iron single atomic site catalyst anchored on 2-D N-doping graphene (Fe-SASC/G) was synthesized and further employed as a biomimetic sensor to electrochemically detect hydrogen peroxide, showing an extremely high sensitivity of 3214.28 μA mM<sup>-1</sup> cm<sup>-2</sup>, which is much higher than that (6.5 μA mM<sup>-1</sup> cm<sup>-2</sup>) of its dispersed on 1-D carbon nanowires (Fe-SASC/NW), ranking the best sensitivity among all reported Fe based catalyst at present. The sensor was also used to successfully <i>in situ</i> monitor H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> released from A549 living cells. The mechanism was further systematically investigated. Results interestingly indicate that the distance between adjacent single Fe atomic catalytic sites on 2-D graphene of Fe-SASC/G matches statistically well with the outer length of bioxygen of H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> to promote a bridge adsorption of -O-O- for simultaneous 2-electron transfer, while the single Fe atoms anchored on distant 1-D nanowires in Fe-SASC/NW only allow an end-adsorption of oxygen atoms for 1-electron transfer. These results demonstrate that Fe-SASC/G holds great promise as an advanced electrode material in selective and sensitive biomimetic sensor and other electrocatalytic applications, while offering scientific insights in deeper single atomic catalysis mechanisms, especially the effects of substrate dimensions on the mechanism.
Keyphrases
- electron transfer
- metal organic framework
- aqueous solution
- visible light
- room temperature
- hydrogen peroxide
- living cells
- reduced graphene oxide
- high density
- ionic liquid
- gold nanoparticles
- carbon nanotubes
- molecular dynamics
- lymph node
- quantum dots
- artificial intelligence
- crystal structure
- amino acid
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- oxide nanoparticles