Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7141075 Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical 2018 23 Pages PDF
Abstract
Fluorescent chemosensors are widely used in chemical engineering, bio-engineering, medical engineering, and environmental engineering. A lot of the chemosensors are based on photo-induced electron transfer (PET) process. In complicated practical systems, the proton is always the most serious interference factor. Herein a new method is proposed for PET chemosensor design to overcome the proton interference: to tune the ΔG of the electron transfer process by introducing different substituents of the sensor molecules. Chemosensors for Zn2+ detection are demonstrated. When the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) energy levels of the fluorophores (4-substituted 1, 8-naphthalimide) are lower than the HOMO energy level of protonated receptor (dipicolylamine-H+), the fluorescence responding to Zn2+ ions is not influenced by pH, meanwhile, the chemosensors can work in acidic media with pH below the pKa values. This should reveal a new criterion for designing of PET based chemosensors for selectivity improvement.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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