The exquisite integration of ESIPT, PET and AIE for constructing fluorescent probe for Hg(II) detection and poisoning

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Abstract

Excessive mercury ions (Hg2+) in the environment can accumulate in human body along with the food chain to cause serious physiological reactions. The fluorescence probes were considered as convenient tool with great potential for Hg2+ detection. Most existing probes suffer from aggregation-induced quenching (ACQ) effects and insufficient sensitivity. Herein, a novel type of fluorophore was developed by combining the aggregation-induced emission (AIE) and excited state intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT) characteristics. Subsequently, a phenyl thioformate group with photoinduced electron transfer (PET) effect was connected to give an efficient "turn-on" probe (HTM), which exhibited good selectivity toward Hg2+, short response time (30 min), coupled with extremely low detection limit (LOD = 1.68 nmol/L). In addition, HTM was used successfully in real samples, cells and drug evaluation, underlying the superiority of HTM to detect Hg2+ in practical applications.

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Cheng, X., Huang, S., Lei, Q., Chen, F., Zheng, F., Zhong, S., … Zeng, W. (2022). The exquisite integration of ESIPT, PET and AIE for constructing fluorescent probe for Hg(II) detection and poisoning. Chinese Chemical Letters, 33(4), 1861–1864. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cclet.2021.10.024

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