Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7141075 | Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical | 2018 | 23 Pages |
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 ÎG 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
Authors
Miao Li, Jiangli Fan, Jianjun Du, Jianfang Cao, Xiaojun Peng,