Synthesis of highly fluorescent Cu/Au bimetallic nanoclusters and their application in a temperature sensor and fluorescent probe for chromium(iii) ions

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Abstract

Bimetallic nanoclusters (BNCs) have attracted great attention due to their cooperative electronic, optical, and catalytic properties. Here, a novel one-step synthetic method is presented to prepare highly fluorescent bimetallic copper-gold nanoclusters (Cu/Au BNCs) in ambient conditions by using glutathione (GSH) as both the reducing agent and the protective layer preventing the aggregation of the as-formed NCs. The resultant Cu/Au BNCs are uniformly dispersed, with an average diameter of 1.5 nm, and it exhibits emission at 450 nm with excitation at 380 nm. Interestingly, the fluorescence signal of the Cu/Au BNCs is reversibly responsive to the environmental temperature, and it shows good sensitivity in the range of 20-70 °C (F = -23.96T + 3149.2 (R = 0.94)). Furthermore, it was found that the fluorescence of Cu/Au BNCs was quenched selectively by Cr3+, and a detection method was further developed with detection linear range from 50 nM to 1 mM (F = -174.85[Cr3+] + 1686.69 (R = 0.98)) and high sensitivity (LOD = 10 nM, S/N = 3).

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Nie, F., Ga, L., Ai, J., & Wang, Y. (2018). Synthesis of highly fluorescent Cu/Au bimetallic nanoclusters and their application in a temperature sensor and fluorescent probe for chromium(iii) ions. RSC Advances, 8(25), 13708–13713. https://doi.org/10.1039/c8ra02118j

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