Issue 31, 2016

Water dispersed fluorescent organic aggregates for the picomolar detection of ClO4 in water, soil and blood serum and the attogram detection of ClO4 in the solid state by a contact mode method

Abstract

Fluorescent organic aggregates (FOAs) of CS-1 have been used for the fluorescence based selective estimation of ClO4 ions. CS-1 undergoes self-aggregation to form FOAs (ϕ = 0.35) with a diameter of 140 ± 50 nm in aqueous medium. Dynamic light scattering and field emission scanning electron microscopy studies reveal that FOAs of CS-1 undergo further aggregation to form larger particles upon addition of ClO4 (10 pM–1 nM concentration) but at higher concentrations of ClO4 ions, these FOAs undergo dis-aggregation to give finally a molecularly dissolved complex of CS-1 and ClO4. This ClO4 induced aggregation–dis-aggregation process of FOAs of CS-1 is associated with super-amplified fluorescence quenching following two domains of non-linear complexation with Ksv values of 2.42 × 108 M−1 and 3.59 × 105 M−1 and variation in the lifetime measurements of FOAs of CS-1 at different concentrations of ClO4. The lowest limit of detection is 10 pM in solution and 6 × 10−18 g cm−2 in the solid state by a contact mode method with a selectivity of ∼10 000 over other inorganic anions and allows the quantitative measurement of ClO4 ions using front surface steady state fluorescence of paper strips coated with CS-1. FOAs of CS-1 find applications in the determination of ClO4 in tap water, soil and also blood serum. Probe CS-2, which differs from CS-1 in lacking three methyl groups on the m-phenylene spacer, shows poor sensitivity (LOD 1.6 μM) towards ClO4. DFT studies of CS-1 and CS-2 and their complexes with ClO4 reveal the effect of methyl substituents on their geometries.

Graphical abstract: Water dispersed fluorescent organic aggregates for the picomolar detection of ClO4− in water, soil and blood serum and the attogram detection of ClO4− in the solid state by a contact mode method

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 May 2016
Accepted
06 Jul 2016
First published
06 Jul 2016

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2016,4, 7420-7429

Water dispersed fluorescent organic aggregates for the picomolar detection of ClO4 in water, soil and blood serum and the attogram detection of ClO4 in the solid state by a contact mode method

R. Kumar, S. Sandhu, P. Singh and S. Kumar, J. Mater. Chem. C, 2016, 4, 7420 DOI: 10.1039/C6TC01891B

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