A cell-compatible red light-emitting multianalyte chemosensor via three birds, one stone strategy
- Authors
- Mabhai, Subhabrata; Dolai, Malay; Dey, Surya Kanta; Dhara, Anamika; Choudhury, Sujata Maiti; Das, Bhriguram; Dey, Satyajit; Jana, Atanu; Banerjee, Deb Ranjan
- Issue Date
- 1-Jan-2021
- Publisher
- ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
- Keywords
- Rhodamine; Azobenzene; Chemosensor; PET - CHEF; Paramagnetic quenching
- Citation
- JOURNAL OF PHOTOCHEMISTRY AND PHOTOBIOLOGY A-CHEMISTRY, v.404
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- JOURNAL OF PHOTOCHEMISTRY AND PHOTOBIOLOGY A-CHEMISTRY
- Volume
- 404
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/5470
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.jphotochem.2020.112889
- ISSN
- 1010-6030
1873-2666
- Abstract
- The design and synthesis of red light-emitting multianalyte chemosensors have always been a challenging task because of its specific requirement of coordination pocket and selective fluorescence mechanism. Herein, we develop a chemosensor via "three birds, one stone" strategy in which we can detect three metal ions with one ligand. A highly sensitive new azo functionalized rhodamine based luminescent sensor is synthesized for se-lective fluorogenic recognition of Al3+, Cr3+, and chromogenic recognition of Cu2+ in ethanol : H2O medium in the red light-emitting zone. Among the guest metals, Cu2+ efficiently quenches the emission whereas Al3+ and Cr3+ induce increased luminescent 4.76 fold for Al3+ and 2.47 fold for Cr3+ through chelation-enhanced fluorescence (CHEF) and photo-induced electron transfer (PET) regulated mechanism with the formation of 1:1 complex. The restricted imine isomerization through complex formation inhibits ongoing PET process with the instantaneous onset of CHEF. The mechanism is in good consonance with NMR (1H & 13C), FT-IR, elemental analysis, DFT, TCSPC, and pH-dependent studies. Micromolar range detection of 1.1 mu M, 1.3 mu M, and 1.5 mu M for Cu2+, Al3+, and Cr3+ respectively, easy penetration into HLCs cells and higher imaging resolution increase its potentiality to assess Al3+ and Cr3+ in vitro. Moreover, paper strip application increases its viability as an onsite naked-eye portable solid probe.
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Collections - College of Advanced Convergence Engineering > Division of System Semiconductor > 1. Journal Articles

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