Supramolecular confinement pyrolysis to carbon-supported Mo nanostructures spanning four scales for hydroquinone determination

Wenhua Cong, Pin Song, Yong Zhang, Su Yang, Weifeng Liu, Tianyuan Zhang, Jiadong Zhou, Meiling Wang*, Xuguang Liu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Metal nanostructures with high atom utilization, abundant active sites, and special electron structures should be beneficial to the electrochemical monitoring of hydroquinone (HQ), a highly toxic environmental pollutant. However, traditional nanostructures, especially non-noble metals generally suffer from severe aggregation, or consist of a mixture of nanoparticles and nanoclusters, resulting in low detection sensitivity. Herein, we precisely control the size of Mo-based nanostructures spanning four scales (viz. Mo2C nanoparticles, Mo2C nanodots, Mo nanoclusters and Mo single atoms) anchored on N, P, O co-doped carbon support. The detection sensitivity of four samples toward the HQ follows the orders of Mo single atoms>Mo2C nanodots>Mo nanoclusters>Mo2C nanoparticles. The catalytic ability of four catalysts is investigated, also showing the same order. The supported Mo single atoms show superior electro-sensing performance for HQ with wide linear range (0.02–200 μM) and low detection limit (0.005 μM), surpassing most previously reported catalysts. Moreover, the coexistence of dihydroxybenzene isomers of catechol (CC) and resorcinol (RC) does not interfere with the detection of HQ on the Mo single-atom sensor. This work opens up a polyoxometalate-based confinement pyrolysis approach to constructing ultrafine metal-based nanostructures spanning multiple-scales for efficient electrochemical applications.

Original languageEnglish
Article number129327
JournalJournal of Hazardous Materials
Volume437
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Sept 2022

Keywords

  • Hydroquinone determination
  • Mo single atoms
  • Mo-based nanostructures
  • Multiscale levels

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