Login / Signup

Carbon and boron nitride quantum dots as optical sensor probes for selective detection of toxic metals in drinking water: a quantum chemical prediction through structure- and morphology-dependent electronic and optical properties.

Chedharla Balaji Sarath KumarRence Painappallil RejiYuvaraj SivalingamYoshiyuki KawazoeVelappa Jayaraman Surya
Published in: RSC advances (2024)
Toxic metals present in drinking water pose a serious threat to the environment and human beings when present in abundance. In this work, we investigated the sensing ability of quantum dots (pristine CQDs, boron/nitrogen/sulphur (B/N/S)-doped CQDs, and BNQDs) of various sizes and morphologies (rectangular, circular, and triangular) towards toxic metals such as arsenic (As), cobalt (Co), nickel (Ni), copper (Cu), and lead (Pb) using quantum chemical density functional theory calculations in both gas and water phases. We probed the structural, electronic, and optical properties of the QDs. All the modelled QDs are energetically stable. Frontier molecular orbital analysis predicted that BNQDs are more chemically stable than all other CQDs. UV-vis absorption and Raman spectra analyses helped to understand the optical properties of all the QDs. Further, adsorption studies revealed that triangular pristine CQDs and sulphur-doped CQDs show higher adsorption affinity towards the toxic metals. The magnitude of adsorption energies follows the trend Ni > Pb > As > Cu > Co in most of the QDs. Several pristine and doped CQDs exhibited chemisorption towards the toxic metals, and hence, they can be used as adsorbents. However, a majority of BNQDs showed physisorption towards the metals, and therefore, they can be used as efficient optical sensors compared to CQDs. Further, the sensing ability of the QDs was explored through optical phenomena such as changes in UV-vis absorption spectra and fluorescence after metal adsorption. When compared to pristine CQDs and B/N/S-doped CQDs, metal complexation caused significant changes in the UV-vis absorbance peak intensities in BNQDs along with peak shifts. Moreover, metal interaction with the QDs increased their fluorescence lifetime with the highest values observed in Co-adsorbed triangular H 18 C 46 (152.30 ns), Pb-adsorbed rectangular H 15 C 30 S (21.29 ns), and As-adsorbed circular B 27 N 27 H 18 (2.99 μs) among pristine CQDs, B/N/S-doped CQDs, and BNQDs, respectively. Overall, we believe that our first-of-its-kind computational prediction of the optical sensing ability of tailor-made zero-dimensional systems such as QDs will be a great aid for experimentalists in designing novel and rapid optical probes to detect toxic metals in drinking water.
Keyphrases