posted on 2021-10-06, 19:15authored byZheng Li, Ruohan Zhang, Xiaohui Lu, Luoyu Hu, Xinyu Wang, Wei Liu, Chen Cui, Xuefeng Liu
Photochemical
pollutants pose a substantial threat to human health
in both outdoor and indoor environments. Herein, we prepare a class
of gold nanoparticle-based colorimetric sensor arrays on optimized
hydrophobic substrates using a simple pin-printing method for accurate
identification and quantification of various gas-phase oxidants, as
these microdetectors are low cost, sensitive, and easy to fabricate.
For an array of AuNP sensors modified with various thiol-terminated
ligands, a unique and distinguishable change in color (i.e., red,
green, and blue response patterns) was obtained for each specific
pollutant for molecular fingerprinting. Remarkable discrimination
among 15 gases at a fairly low vapor concentration (i.e., 500 ppb)
was illustrated using standard chemometric methods. Using digital
imaging, the AuNP colorimetric sensor array offers ultrasensitive
dosimetric identification of gas-phase oxidants relevant to outdoor
and indoor air pollution, with limits of detection generally at sub-ppb
levels for 2 h measurement. As a practical application, the sensor
array is able to predict the overall air quality in indoor office
environments over 24 h. Such sensor array based on chemically induced
sintering of nanoparticles has significant implications for the development
of nanosensors used in continuous monitoring of potential airborne
pollutants at low concentrations from a large number of locations
in a cost-effective manner.