TY - JOUR
T1 - Molecularly imprinted polymers for the sensing of hazardous chemicals
T2 - Mechanisms and applications
AU - Wu, Dan
AU - Xu, Zhibin
AU - Wang, Yifei
AU - Guo, Jiong
AU - Zhang, Wenxin
AU - Qiu, Lili
AU - Meng, Zihui
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2025/11
Y1 - 2025/11
N2 - Hazardous chemicals, characterized by their diverse origins and significant toxicity, pose systemic threats to global public safety, ecological environments, and human health. These chemicals primarily include explosives, chemical warfare agents, organophosphorus pesticides, biotoxins, and illicit drugs. While conventional detection technologies exhibit high sensitivity, their reliance on bulky instruments and specialized expertise impedes rapid on-site response capabilities. The development of novel detection methodologies featuring efficient identification, real-time monitoring, and anti-interference capabilities has become an urgent demand to avoid threats from hazardous chemicals. As synthetic biomimetic recognition materials, molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) have demonstrated significant potential due to their high specificity, stability, and customizable recognition sites. MIPs achieve selective target binding through pre-designed cavities that are complementary to analytes in terms of size, shape, and functional groups. Recent advances demonstrate that MIPs integrated with optical, electrochemical, and mass-sensitive sensing principles exhibit remarkable advantages in detection sensitivity, anti-interference capability, and environmental adaptability, making them suitable for rapid on-site detection and real-time monitoring scenarios. This review systematically summarizes recent progress in MIP-based hazardous chemical detection, focusing on biomimetic recognition mechanisms and technical superiority, while exploring the potential for multi-scenario applications. Current challenges and future perspectives of MIP-based detection strategies are critically examined, providing a theoretical foundation for the development of efficient and portable detection platforms.
AB - Hazardous chemicals, characterized by their diverse origins and significant toxicity, pose systemic threats to global public safety, ecological environments, and human health. These chemicals primarily include explosives, chemical warfare agents, organophosphorus pesticides, biotoxins, and illicit drugs. While conventional detection technologies exhibit high sensitivity, their reliance on bulky instruments and specialized expertise impedes rapid on-site response capabilities. The development of novel detection methodologies featuring efficient identification, real-time monitoring, and anti-interference capabilities has become an urgent demand to avoid threats from hazardous chemicals. As synthetic biomimetic recognition materials, molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) have demonstrated significant potential due to their high specificity, stability, and customizable recognition sites. MIPs achieve selective target binding through pre-designed cavities that are complementary to analytes in terms of size, shape, and functional groups. Recent advances demonstrate that MIPs integrated with optical, electrochemical, and mass-sensitive sensing principles exhibit remarkable advantages in detection sensitivity, anti-interference capability, and environmental adaptability, making them suitable for rapid on-site detection and real-time monitoring scenarios. This review systematically summarizes recent progress in MIP-based hazardous chemical detection, focusing on biomimetic recognition mechanisms and technical superiority, while exploring the potential for multi-scenario applications. Current challenges and future perspectives of MIP-based detection strategies are critically examined, providing a theoretical foundation for the development of efficient and portable detection platforms.
KW - Biotoxins
KW - Chemical warfare agents
KW - Drugs
KW - Explosives
KW - Molecularly imprinted polymers
KW - Organophosphorus pesticides
KW - Sensor
UR - http://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105008701202
U2 - 10.1016/j.trac.2025.118348
DO - 10.1016/j.trac.2025.118348
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:105008701202
SN - 0165-9936
VL - 192
JO - TrAC - Trends in Analytical Chemistry
JF - TrAC - Trends in Analytical Chemistry
M1 - 118348
ER -