Abstract

Inspired by information processing and communication in nature based on molecular recognition and structural diversity, ongoing efforts aim to development of artificial molecular or nano-systems for sensing, logic computing, and even data storage and safety. However, due to their preparation/functionalization shortcomings (laborious and time-consuming), poor flexibility and compatibility, and limited paradigm, it is still a big challenge whether simple molecules can be used to achieve comprehensive and universal applications from sensing to information storage and protection. Herein, we for the first time demonstrated a molecular paradigm—computer-like “basic input output system (BIOS)” which can realize “plug-and-play” sensing, information encoding, molecular cryptography, and steganography based on a simple artificial molecule (p-nitrophenol, PNP). Based on its molecular recognition and inherent chemical identities, PNP was utilized for colorimetric detection of multiple metal ions (Hg2+, Fe3+, Al3+, Cr3+) and distinguishing their valence (like Cr3+/Cr6+, Fe3+/Fe2+). Interestingly, PNP can achieve the “plug-and-play” fluorescent expansion of detection channels by directly mixing with fluorescent molecules, indicating that PNP molecule can be served as a molecular BIOS with flexibility and compatibility. Impressively, the selectivity embedded in PNP-based BIOS sensing system can be developed as molecular-level double cryptographic steganography to encode, encrypt and hide specific information (like the content of classical literature). This research not only provides a basic idea for building a molecular paradigm with “plug-and-play” flexibility and compatibility, but also provides ideas for the use of molecular sensing and informatization to open up the digitalization of the molecular world.

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