In recent times, nanomaterials have been applied for
the detection
and sensing of toxic gases in the environment owing to their large
surface-to-volume ratio and efficiency. CO
2
is a toxic
gas that is associated with causing global warming, while SO
2
and NO
2
are also characterized as nonbenign gases in
the sense that when inhaled, they increase the rate of respiratory
infections. Therefore, there is an explicit reason to develop efficient
nanosensors for monitoring and sensing of these gases in the environment.
Herein, we performed quantum chemical simulation on a Ca
12
O
12
nanocage as an efficient nanosensor for sensing and
monitoring of these gases (CO
2
, SO
2
, NO
2
) by employing high-level density functional theory modeling
at the B3LYP-GD3(BJ)/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory. The results obtained
from our studies revealed that the adsorption of CO
2
and
SO
2
on the Ca
12
O
12
nanocage with
adsorption energies of −2.01 and −5.85 eV, respectively,
is chemisorption in nature, while that of NO
2
possessing
an adsorption energy of −0.69 eV is related to physisorption.
Moreover, frontier molecular orbital (FMO), global reactivity descriptors,
and noncovalent interaction (NCI) analysis revealed that the adsorption
of CO
2
and SO
2
on the Ca
12
O
12
nanocage is stable adsorption, while that of NO
2
is unstable
adsorption. Thus, we can infer that the Ca
12
O
12
nanocage is more efficient as a nanosensor in sensing CO
2
and SO
2
gases than in sensing NO
2
gas.
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