| Literature DB >> 28723170 |
Zinuo Jiao1,2, Yu Zhang1, Wei Xu1,2, Xiangtao Zhang1,2, Haibo Jiang1,2, Pengcheng Wu1,2, Yanyan Fu1, Qingguo He1, Huimin Cao1, Jiangong Cheng1.
Abstract
A multiple-anchored fluorescent probe ((((hexane-1,6-diylbis(2,7-bis(4-formyl)-phenyl)-9H-fluorine-9,9-diyl))-bis(hexane-6,1-diyl))-bis(9H-carbazole-9,3,6-triyl))-tetrakis(benzene-4,1-diyl))-tetraformyl-(8FP-2F) with eight aldehyde groups was designed and synthesized. The molecule has four branches and highly twisted structure. Furthermore, it tends to self-assemble into nanospheres, which is beneficial for gaseous analyte penetration and high fluorescence quantum efficiency. Among gaseous analytes, detection of aniline vapor is extraordinarily important in the control of environmental issues and human diseases. Herein, 8FP-2F was introduced to detect aniline vapor with distinguished sensitivity and selectivity via simple Schiff base reaction at room temperature. After exposure to saturate aniline vapor, the 89% fluorescence of 8FP-2F was quenched in 50 s and the detection limit was as low as 3 ppb. Further study showed the suitable HOMO/LUMO energy levels and matched orbital symmetry between probe and aniline molecules ensured chemical reaction and PET process work together. The synergistic effect resulted in a significant sensing performance and fluorescence quenching toward aniline vapor. Moreover, the multiple active sites structure of 8FP-2F means it could be applied for constructing many interesting structures and highly efficient organic optoelectronic functional materials.Entities:
Keywords: aniline vapor; fluorescence probe; low detection; multiple active sites; synergistic effect
Year: 2017 PMID: 28723170 DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.7b00143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Sens ISSN: 2379-3694 Impact factor: 7.711