Literature DB >> 28541353

Pendant chain engineering to fine-tune the nanomorphologies and solid state luminescence of naphthalimide AIEEgens: application to phenolic nitro-explosive detection in water.

Niranjan Meher1, Parameswar Krishnan Iyer.   

Abstract

Strategically, a series of five angular "V" shaped naphthalimide AIEEgens with varying pendant chains (butyl, hexyl, octyl, cyclohexyl and methylcyclohexyl) have been synthesized to fine-tune their nanomorphological and photophysical properties. With similar aromatic cores and electronic states, unexpected tuning of the condensed state emission colors and nanomorphologies (reproducible on any kind of surface) of naphthalimides has been achieved for the first time simply by varying their side chains. Conclusive analysis by various spectroscopic techniques (SC-XRD, powder-XRD, DLS, FESEM) and DFT computational studies confirmed the full control of the pendant chain (in terms of bulkiness around the naphthalimide core, which restricts the ease of intermolecular π-π interactions) over the nanoaggregate morphology and solid state emissive properties of the AIEEgens; this can be rationalized to all aggregation-prone systems. These comprehensive studies establish a conceptually unique yet simple and effective method to precisely tune the nanomorphologies and the emission colors of aggregation-prone small organic molecules by judicious choice of the non-conjugated pendant chain. Thus, considering the prime role of the active layer nanomorphology in all organic optoelectronic devices, this methodology may emerge as a promising tool to improve device performance. Among all the congeners, the hexyl chain-containing congener (HNQ) forms well-defined nanoribbons with smaller diameters (as confirmed from DLS: 166 nm and FESEM: 150 nm) and provides a larger surface area. Consequently, the HNQ-nanoribbons were employed as a fluorescent sensor for the discriminative detection of trinitrophenol (TNP) in pure aqueous media. FE-SEM images revealed that, upon gradual addition of TNP (10 nM to 100 μM), these nanoribbons undergo an aggregation/disaggregation process, forming non-fluorescent co-aggregates with TNP, and provide highly enhanced sensitivity compared to existing state-of-the-art on aggregation-prone systems. Fluorescence titration studies confirmed that HNQ can detect the presence of TNP as low as 16.8 ppb and can serve as a cost-effective portable device incorporated with UV-light for on-site visual detection of TNP, even in the presence of potentially competing nitroaromatic compounds.

Entities:  

Year:  2017        PMID: 28541353     DOI: 10.1039/c7nr02174g

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nanoscale        ISSN: 2040-3364            Impact factor:   7.790


  4 in total

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Authors:  Xi Chen; Sameer Hussain; Ansar Abbas; Yi Hao; Akhtar H Malik; Xuemeng Tian; Huijia Song; Ruixia Gao
Journal:  Mikrochim Acta       Date:  2022-02-03       Impact factor: 5.833

2.  Aldehyde group driven aggregation-induced enhanced emission in naphthalimides and its application for ultradetection of hydrazine on multiple platforms.

Authors:  Niranjan Meher; Swagatika Panda; Sachin Kumar; Parameswar Krishnan Iyer
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2018-04-06       Impact factor: 9.825

3.  Tetraphenylpyrimidine-Based AIEgens: Facile Preparation, Theoretical Investigation and Practical Application.

Authors:  Junkai Liu; Lingxiang Pan; Qian Peng; Anjun Qin
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2017-10-10       Impact factor: 4.411

4.  ICT and AIE Characteristics Two Cyano-Functionalized Probes and Their Photophysical Properties, DFT Calculations, Cytotoxicity, and Cell Imaging Applications.

Authors:  Arup Tarai; Meina Huang; Pintu Das; Wenhui Pan; Jianguo Zhang; Zhenyu Gu; Wei Yan; Junle Qu; Zhigang Yang
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2020-01-29       Impact factor: 4.411

  4 in total

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