| Literature DB >> 31627384 |
Nour Doumani1,2,3, Elias Bou-Maroun1, Jacqueline Maalouly2, Maya Tueni3, Adrien Dubois4, Claire Bernhard4, Franck Denat4, Philippe Cayot1, Nicolas Sok5.
Abstract
For efficiently measuring copper (II) ions in the acidic media of white wine, a new chemosensor based on rhodamine B coupled to a tetraazamacrocyclic ring (13aneN4CH2NH2) was designed and synthesized by a one-pot reaction using ethanol as a green solvent. The obtained chemosensor was characterized via NMR, UV and fluorescent spectra. It was marked with no color emission under neutral pH conditions, with a pink color emission under acidic conditions, and a magenta color emission under acidic conditions where copper (II) ions were present. The sensitivity towards copper (II) ions was tested and verified over Ca2+, Ag+, Zn2+, Mg2+, Co2+, Ni2+, Fe2+, Pb2+, Cd2+, Fe3+, and Mn2+, with a detection limit of 4.38 × 10-8 M in the fluorescence spectrum.Entities:
Keywords: acidic pH; copper (II) sensor; fluorescent chemosensor; tetraazamacrocycle rhodamine-based; water-soluble
Year: 2019 PMID: 31627384 PMCID: PMC6832540 DOI: 10.3390/s19204514
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Scheme 1‘One-pot’ synthesis route of Probe 3.
Figure 1(a) Inset images showing the color change of 1 10–4 M Probe 3 alone (upper image) and in the presence of 1 10–4 M copper (lower image) at various pH conditions ranging from 4.1 to 8 (left to right in both), as well as the color intensity variation with changing the pH conditions. (b) Inset image showing the intense magenta color development upon addition of 1 10−4 M Cu2+ ions to a solution of 1 10–4 M Probe 3 in an acidic pH environment (4.7). (c) UV-visible spectra at 562 nm of 1 10–4 M Probe 3 at different pH values (4.1 to 8) alone and in presence of 1 10–4 M Cu2+ ions.
Scheme 2The proposed reaction mechanism of 1 10–4 M Probe 3 alone in acidic pH (Step 1: protonation of the macrocyclic part and development of the naked-eye-detected pink color) and upon addition of 1 10–4 M copper (II) ions (Step 2: color change from pink to the naked-eye-detected magenta color upon addition of copper (II) ions).
Figure 2Fluorescence titrations (λex: 583 nm) of Probe 3 (1 µM) in acid conditions (pH 4.7) with addition of [Cu2+] a: 0 M, b: 5 10–8 M, c: 1.0 10–7 M, d: 1.5 10–7 M, e: 2.0 10–7 M, f: 2.5 10–7 M, g: 3.0 10–7 M, h: 3.5 10–7 M, i: 4.5 10–7 M, j: 5.0 10–7 M, k: 6.5 10–7 M, l: 7.0 10–7 M, m: 8.5 10–7 M, n: 1 µM.
Figure 3Metal-ion selectivity of Probe 3 (1 µM) in acid conditions (pH 4.7). The pinkish lines represent the emission of the 11 solutions containing Probe 3 (1 µM) and 1 equiv. of one of the following metal ions: Ca2+; Ag+; Zn2+; Mg2+; Co2+; Ni2+; Fe2+; Pb2+; Cd2+; Fe3+; and Mn2+. The magenta lines represent the fluorescence quenching of a solution of Probe 3 (1 µM) and 1 equiv. of the cations of interest upon addition of 1 equiv. of copper (II) cations. The magenta pointed line represents the fluorescence emission of a solution of Probe 3 (1 µM) and 1 equiv. of copper (II) cations.
Results of copper (II) ions present in white wine samples with different copper concentrations.
| Sample | WS1 | WS2 | WS3 | WS4 | WS5 | WS6 | Controls |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cu2+ content (mg/L) 1 | 0.03 ± 0.01 | 0.15 ± 0.01 | 0.38 ± 0.01 | 0.44 ± 0.02 | 0.68 ± 0.00 | 0.76 ± 0.00 | 0.00 ± 0.00 |
1 Mean of three replicates (±SD).