posted on 2017-05-24, 00:00authored byYin Liu, Gaoxing Su, Fei Wang, Jianbo Jia, Shuhuan Li, Linlin Zhao, Yali Shi, Yaqi Cai, Hao Zhu, Bin Zhao, Guibin Jiang, Hongyu Zhou, Bing Yan
Perfluorooctanesulfonate
(PFOS) persistently accumulates in the
environment and in humans, causing various toxicities. To determine
the key molecular determinants for optimal PFOS specificity and efficiency,
we designed and synthesized a combinatorial gold nanoparticle (GNP)
library consisting of 18 members with rationally diversified hydrophobic,
electrostatic, and fluorine–fluorine interaction components
for PFOS bindings. According to our findings, the electrostatic and
F–F interactions between PFOS and nanoparticles are complementary.
When F–F attractions are relatively weak, the electrostatic
interactions are dominant. As F–F interactions increase, the
electrostatic contributions are reduced to as low as 20%, demonstrating
that F–F binding may overpower even electrostatic interactions.
Furthermore, F–F interactions (28–79% binding efficiency)
are 2-fold stronger than regular hydrophobic interactions (15–39%
binding efficiency) for PFOS adsorption, explaining why these novel
PFOS-binding nanoparticles are superior to other conventional materials
based on either hydrophobic or electrostatic binding. The PFOS adsorption
by the optimized nanoparticles performs well in the presence of ionic
interferences and in environmental wastewater. This library mapping
approach can potentially be applied to recognition mechanism investigation
of other pollutants and facilitate the discovery of effective monitoring
probes and matrices for their removal.