Thiophosphoryl-PMMH Dendrimers for Potential Detection and Remediation of CBRN Contamination: Selected Studies and General Guidelines and Procedures
Highlights
- Thiophosphoryl–PMMH dendrimers were determined for the technologically advanced defense of CBRN.
- Thiophosphoryl–PMMH dendrimers exhibit dielectric constant and losses like linear polymers.
- Specific surface morphology and defects of dendrimers were determined by infrared thermal method.
- General guidelines and procedures for dendrimers for civilian and military users are outlined.
Abstract
1. Introduction
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- Medicine and pharmacy: (i) targeted drug delivery: nanoparticles (e.g., liposomes, dendrimers) transport drug substances directly to diseased cells, minimizing side effects; (ii) diagnostics: gold or iron oxide nanoparticles serve as contrast in imaging (MRI, tomography); (iii) cancer therapy: light-activated nanomaterials (photothermia) destroy cancer cells.
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- Environmental protection: (i) removal of pollution: titanium dioxide nanofilters break down toxins in water and air when exposed to light; (ii) renewable energy: nanomaterials in solar cells (e.g., perovskites) increase energy conversion efficiency.
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- Electronics and industry: (i) miniaturization: graphene, carbon nanotubes or quantum dots enable faster and smaller electronics; (ii) self-cleaning surfaces: TiO2 nanoparticle coatings break down organic contaminants when exposed to UV.
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- Security and safety engineering: (i) threat detection: nano-sensors identify trace amounts of explosive, chemical or biological substances; (ii) lighter armor: nanocomposites (e.g., nanofibers) strengthen protective materials without increasing weight.
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- Health toxicity: (i) effects on cells: some nanoparticles (e.g., carbon nanotubes) can damage DNA or cause inflammation (analogous to asbestos); (ii) bioaccumulation: nanoproducts can accumulate in organisms, disrupting ecosystem functions.
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- Environmental hazards: (i) difficulty in recycling: nanomaterials are often not subject to standard disposal processes, leading to contamination; (ii) unpredictable interactions: nanopowders can react with other compounds in the environment, creating toxic mixtures.
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- Social and ethical risks: (i) nanotechnological weapons: nanomaterials can be used to create unconventional means of warfare (e.g., toxic aerosols); (ii) technological inequalities: developing countries often lack access to the benefits of nanotechnology, deepening global inequalities.
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- Lack of regulation: (i) unknown long-term effects: many nanomaterials have not been tested for health effects after years of exposure; (ii) inadequate standards: current regulations often do not take into account the specifics of nanoparticles, making it difficult to control their use.
- Precise targeting of detection and sorption thanks to surface functionalization (e.g., with compounds that recognize phosphate groups in neurotoxins such as sarin);
- Effective multivalent binding, which increases the strength of interaction with the toxin;
- Chemical selectivity towards various classes of CBRN (e.g., molecules containing metal ions, organophosphate groups, or radioactive isotopes);
- Potential biodegradability, which minimizes the risk of secondary environmental contamination.
2. Materials and Methods
- Thiophosphoryl-PMMH-3 dendrimer, generation 0.5 (three aldehyde surface groups); Molecular weight 426; melting point (m. p.) 115–119 °C; purity: 98%; No. CAS: 159213-45-3.
- Thiophosphoryl-PMMH-6 dendrimer, generation 2.0 (six dichlorophosphinothioyl surface groups); Molecular weight 2389.28; m. p. no data; purity: 99%; No. CAS: 173612-59-4.
- Thiophosphoryl-PMMH-6 dendrimer, generation 1.5 (six aldehyde surface groups); Molecular weight 1423.32; m. p. 75 °C; purity: 99%; No. CAS: 169132-80-3.
- Thiophosphoryl-PMMH-12 dendrimer, generation 2.5 (twelve aldehyde surface groups); Molecular weight 3417.21; m. p. no data; purity: 96%; No. CAS: 173612-60-7.
3. Results
3.1. Basic Characteristic of Dendrimers
3.2. Dielectric Spectroscopy
3.3. Thermo-Electric Studies
4. Discussion
Proposal of General Guidelines and Procedures for the Use of Dendrimers for the Potential Detection and Remediation of CBRN Contamination
- Sensitivity: Fluorescently modified PMMH dendrimers achieve sub-ppb LODs, outperforming most MOF or metal-oxide platforms.
- Speed: Sub-minute fluorescence response allows real-time monitoring in the field.
- Chemical Stability: They maintain integrity over wide temperature and pH ranges, crucial for military and CBRN deployment.
- Design Versatility: PMMH dendrimers are highly modifiable (via phosphonates, thiols, carboxyls), allowing custom affinity for various CBRN agents.
- Integration Compatibility: Can be deposited as thin films, nanogels, or embedded into textiles—superior platform flexibility.
- Catalytic Degradation Efficiency: While functionalized dendrimers can neutralize agents, they do not match enzymatic detox efficiency (e.g., OPH hydrolysis of organophosphates).
- Bioactivity Risks: Despite promising in vitro biocompatibility, long-term bioaccumulation or degradation byproducts remain under study.
- Scalability: PMMH dendrimers synthesis at the dendrimer level is more complex and cost-intensive than mass-produced MOF powders or nanofibers.
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Category | Guidelines/Procedures | Benefits | Risks/Limitations |
---|---|---|---|
Synthesis and preparation | Controlled polymerization (e.g., ATRP) for the construction of the PMMH core. | Highly repeatable structure. | High cost of synthesis. |
Contamination detection | Functionalization with thiophosphoryl groups (reaction with PSCl3 in anhydrous medium). | Possibility of modification for specific threats. | Risk of contamination by toxic precursors (e.g., chlorides). |
Contamination removal | Functionalization with fluorescent tags (e.g., rhodamine) for optical detection of toxins. | High sensitivity (ppb level detection). | Sensitivity to environmental interferences (e.g., pH, temperature). |
Safety | Integration with electrochemical sensors. | Fast response (less than 1 min). | Limited adsorption capacity at high concentrations of contaminants. |
Deactivation and disposal | Use of dendrimers as adsorbents in filters or gels. | Simultaneous neutralization of chemicals and pathogens. | Potential bioaccumulation of non-degraded dendrimers in ecosystems. |
Feature | Dendrimers (np. PAMAM) | Carbon Nanotubes | Metal Oxides (e.g., TiO2, ZnO) |
---|---|---|---|
Functionalizable | High, precise | Difficult, limited | Variable |
Density of functional groups | Very high | Low–Medium | Average |
Selectivity of detection | High (ligand-specific) | Low | Low-Moderate |
Sorption capacity | High (3D structure) | Moderate | Moderate |
Ability to neutralize toxins | High (chemical reactivity) | Limited | Variable |
Biodegradability/Toxicity | Potentially biodegradable | Biopersistentne | Often toxic or insoluble |
Can be used in bio-sensors | Very good | Limited | Good (but less selective) |
PMMH G | 0.5 | 1.5 | 2.0 | 2.5 |
---|---|---|---|---|
ε′ (1 KHZ) | 2.98 | 2.74 | 77.42 | 2.66 |
TANδ (1 KHZ) | 0.028 | 0.001 | 6.612 | 0.001 |
Tasks | Dielectric Properties: Electrochemical CBRN Identification | Thermoelectric Properties: Catalytic Degradation of CBRN Agents |
---|---|---|
Mechanism | Thiophosphoryl dendrimers contain electronegative phosphate and sulfur groups (P=S, P–SH), which influence the local polarity and dielectric constant of the material. High local permittivity favors the concentration of the electric field around target molecules (e.g., organophosphorus neurotoxins such as sarin), facilitating their electrochemical detection. | Under the influence of local heating (e.g., solar radiation or microwave pulse), PMMH dendrimers with thiophosphoryl groups generate temperature gradients, which can initiate charge transfer (Seebeck effect). This facilitates the formation of reactive oxygen species or sulfide anions, which catalytically degrade CBRN toxins. |
Benefits | Increased detector sensitivity—changes in impedance or surface potential are more pronounced in the presence of CBRN molecules. Selectivity—P–S and P–O bonds can specifically interact with ester and phosphate groups in toxins. Signal stability—the branched structure of the dendrimer enables stable and reproducible signaling in electrochemical sensors (e.g., EIS, CV). | Photocatalytic degradation of, for example, halogen derivatives or mustard agents (HD), Self-heating sensor layers—detection + neutralization in a single material, Electron and ion mobility—supports the breakdown of ester, organophosphate, or thiol bonds in toxins. |
Material Characteristics | ||
---|---|---|
Action | Scientific Rationale | Ref. |
Structural Analysis (NMR, FTIR, MS) | It allows confirmation of the presence of phosphorus and thiophosphoric groups responsible for chemical activity | [36] |
Chemical and thermal stability assessment | PMMH withstands extreme temperatures and pH—crucial in battlefield conditions | [37] |
Toxicology tests (in vitro/in vivo) | A prerequisite for operational safety and compliance with REACH regulations | [38] |
Functional modification | ||
Addition of detection groups (e.g., fluorophores, VX ligands) | Increases selectivity and the ability to quickly detect CWA | [39] |
Surface modification | It enables better affinity for toxic molecules, e.g., due to electrostatic charges | [40] |
Smart sensor design | Fluorescence signaling after CBRN contact increases immediate detection | [41] |
Contamination detection | ||
Application on active surfaces (electrodes, gels) | Dendrimers can be permanently deposited on substrates for field applications | [42] |
Sensor sensitivity calibration | Detection below 10 ppb—essential for trace amounts of CWA | [43] |
Integration with mobile systems (UAVs, robots) | Remote threat detection enhances operator safety | [44] |
Decontamination procedures | ||
Coating of carrier materials (e.g., fabrics, foams) | In situ, mustard gas neutralization confirmed in <10 min | [45] |
Application in the form of gels or liquids | Easy application to equipment, possibility of decontamination without specialized tools | [46] |
Disposal of waste materials | ISO and EPA compliant—no secondary toxin emissions | [47] |
Evaluation of efficacy and safety | ||
Performance Validation | Proven efficacy in simulated and operational settings | [48] |
Monitoring of side effects | Observation of human/environmental impacts required by regulations | [49] |
Operator Training | Reducing the risk of errors and increasing effectiveness on the ground | [50] |
Integration with CBRN systems | ||
Compliance with guidelines (e.g., NATO AEP-66) | It guarantees interoperability with existing military and civilian systems | [51] |
Institutional cooperation (OPCW, WHO, CDC) | Ensures the implementation of best practices and international compliance | [52] |
Early warning systems (AI and sensors) | Ability to integrate with IoT and threat prediction systems | [53] |
Metric | PMMH Dendrimers | MOF Composites (ZIF-8, UiO-66-NH2) | Metal-Oxide Nanofibers (e.g., ZnO, TiO2) | Enzyme-Based Gels (e.g., OPH, PTE Hydrogel Systems) |
---|---|---|---|---|
LOD (VX, Sarin, Chlorine) | <1 ppb (fluorogenic probes) | 1–10 ppb (depends on linker type) | 5–50 ppb (gas phase) | 1–5 ppb (liquid phase) |
Response Time | <30 s (fluorescent response) | 1–5 min | ~3 min | <1 min (if active enzyme present) |
Operational Stability | High (−20 to 80 °C, pH 2–11) | Moderate (humidity sensitive) | High (excellent heat resistance) | Poor (loss of activity >40 °C) |
Shelf Life | >12 months (dry state) | ~6–9 months (desiccant needed) | ~12 months | ~1–3 months (requires refrigeration) |
Signal Specificity (CB vs. non-CB) | High (via functional ligands) | Medium–High | Low (non-specific oxidation) | High (active site-selective) |
Ease of Integration (sensors) | High (thin films, nanogels) | Medium (requires scaffolding) | High (electrospun mats) | Low (gel matrix not field robust) |
Detoxification Capability | Moderate–High (thiol groups) | Moderate (passive adsorption) | Low–Moderate (oxidation only) | High (enzymatic hydrolysis) |
Reusability | Yes (up to 10 cycles) | Limited (~3–5 cycles) | Yes (cleaning between uses) | No (single-use or biohazardous) |
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Lalik, S.; Gonciarz, A.; Pich, R.; Bogdanowicz, K.A.; Pellowski, W.; Miedziak, J.; Szczepaniak, M.; Marzec, M.; Iwan, A. Thiophosphoryl-PMMH Dendrimers for Potential Detection and Remediation of CBRN Contamination: Selected Studies and General Guidelines and Procedures. Materials 2025, 18, 3805. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18163805
Lalik S, Gonciarz A, Pich R, Bogdanowicz KA, Pellowski W, Miedziak J, Szczepaniak M, Marzec M, Iwan A. Thiophosphoryl-PMMH Dendrimers for Potential Detection and Remediation of CBRN Contamination: Selected Studies and General Guidelines and Procedures. Materials. 2025; 18(16):3805. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18163805
Chicago/Turabian StyleLalik, Sebastian, Agnieszka Gonciarz, Robert Pich, Krzysztof A. Bogdanowicz, Witalis Pellowski, Jacek Miedziak, Marcin Szczepaniak, Monika Marzec, and Agnieszka Iwan. 2025. "Thiophosphoryl-PMMH Dendrimers for Potential Detection and Remediation of CBRN Contamination: Selected Studies and General Guidelines and Procedures" Materials 18, no. 16: 3805. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18163805
APA StyleLalik, S., Gonciarz, A., Pich, R., Bogdanowicz, K. A., Pellowski, W., Miedziak, J., Szczepaniak, M., Marzec, M., & Iwan, A. (2025). Thiophosphoryl-PMMH Dendrimers for Potential Detection and Remediation of CBRN Contamination: Selected Studies and General Guidelines and Procedures. Materials, 18(16), 3805. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma18163805