Monodispersed Molecular Phthalocyanine with Sulfur-Driven Electron Delocalization for Enhanced Electrochemical Biosensing

Small. 2024 Feb 14:e2308285. doi: 10.1002/smll.202308285. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Heterogenizing the molecular catalysts on conductive scaffolds to achieve the isolated molecular dispersion and expected coordination structures is significant yet still challenging. Herein, a sulfur-driving strategy to anchor monodispersed cobalt phthalocyanine on nitrogen and sulfur co-doped graphene (NSG-CoPc) is demonstrated. Experimental and theoretical analysis prove that the incorporation of S dramatically improves the adsorption capability of NSG and evokes the monodispersion of the CoPc molecule, promoting the axial Co─N coordination and the electron delocalization of the Co catalytic center. Benefiting from the reduced activation energy barrier and boosted electron transfer, as well as the maximized active site utilization, NSG-CoPc exhibits outstanding H2 O2 oxidization and sensing performance (used as a representative reaction). Moreover, the usage of NSG as a substrate can be readily extended to other metal (Ni, Cu, and Fe) phthalocyanine molecules with molecular-level dispersion. This work clarifies the mechanism of heteroatoms decoration and provides a new paradigm in devising monodispersed molecular catalysts with modulated chemical surroundings for broad applications.

Keywords: electrochemical biosensing; electron delocalization; heteroatoms doping; metal phthalocyanine; monodispersion.