Efficient Discrimination of Hazardous Organophosphate Flame Retardants via Cataluminescence-Based Multidimensional Ratiometric Sensing

Anal Chem. 2024 Mar 19;96(11):4544-4552. doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.3c05333. Epub 2024 Feb 16.

Abstract

Emerging contaminants have recently evolved into a severe worldwide environmental issue. Organophosphate flame retardants (OPFRs) with neurotoxicity, genotoxicity, and reproductive and developmental toxicity are a class of notorious emerging contaminants that cause great concern. The development of high-efficiency and portable sensors for rapid online monitoring of OPFRs has become the primary demand for the exploration of the environmental migration and transformation of OPFRs. In this work, interestingly, the cataluminescence (CTL) phenomenon of OPFRs is first observed, and an ingenious multidimensional ratiometric CTL sensing strategy is developed for the recognition of multiple OPFRs. Three characteristic ratios are extracted from the multipeak CTL spectral curves based on energy transfer of single Tb/Eu-modified MgO sensing material, and thus a novel three-dimensional (3D) code recognition could be mapped out. This obtained 3D coordinate is found to be a unique characteristic for a given OPFR, just like an exclusive person's ID number, which can successfully discriminate and detect 10 kinds of OPFR vapors, including homologous series and isomers. More importantly, CTL mechanism investigations for OPFRs demonstrate that OPFRs undergo a series of chemical reaction processes, e.g., oxidative pyrolysis and hydroxylation, and different high-energy excited intermediates are generated, which trigger discrepant energy-transfer efficiency toward rare earth ions, leading to multipeak spectral profiles. Briefly, this proposed CTL analytical platform for OPFRs recognition initiates a new sensing principle for the efficient identification of emerging contaminants and shows significant prospects on rapid on-site detection.