z-logo
Premium
Enhancing Peroxidase‐Like Activity and Photothermal Property of Copper Single‐Atom Nanozyme via A Cascade Competition Strategy
Author(s) -
Wu Qiushuang,
Zheng Guoan,
Li Lihua,
Wang Li
Publication year - 2025
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.202422588
Subject(s) - materials science , cascade , peroxidase , copper , photothermal therapy , competition (biology) , nanotechnology , atom (system on chip) , property (philosophy) , chemical physics , chemical engineering , metallurgy , enzyme , organic chemistry , chemistry , computer science , ecology , philosophy , epistemology , embedded system , engineering , biology
Abstract Single‐atom nanozymes (SANs) are promising enzyme‐active catalysts due to their maximum atomic utilization. However, it is still a challenge to precisely regulate the single‐atom structure, especially in multimetallic MOFs. Based on the Cu‐N 4 structure of Zn 4 Cu 1 , a cascade competition strategy mediated by a buffer (polydopamine) is proposed for the first time, which induces a one‐step nonthermal reaction to precisely remove the inactive Zn site and adjust the Cu coordination environment. Experimental results and theoretical calculations show that the Cu single‐atom nanozyme with Cu‐N 2 O 2 structure (Cu‐N/O) breaks the strong steric restriction, and the exposed Cu active site can better adsorb H 2 O 2 , making it have peroxidase‐like activity. Compared with traditional bimetallic (Cu 4 Zn 1 ) and monometallic (Cu‐MoF) nanozymes, it has stronger peroxidase‐like catalytic activity and photothermal properties, as well as good photocatalytic activity and extremely strong stability. It is successfully applied to Lateral flow immunoassay to achieve three‐mode ultrasensitive detection of Escherichia coli O157:H7, and the test strips after detection are subjected to broad‐spectrum sterilization treatment.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here
Empowering knowledge with every search

Address

John Eccles House
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom