Mechanistic insight into the sensing of nitroaromatic compounds by metal-organic frameworks

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Abstract

There has been extensive research on the sensing of explosive nitroaromatic compounds (NACs) using fluorescent metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). However, ambiguity in the sensing mechanism has hampered the development of efficient explosive sensors. Here we report the synthesis of a hydroxyl-functionalized MOF for rapid and efficient sensing of NACs and examine in detail its fluorescence quenching mechanisms. In chloroform, quenching takes place primarily by exciton migration to the ground-state complex formed between the MOF and the analytes. A combination of hydrogen-bonding interactions and π–π stacking interactions are responsible for fluorescence quenching, and this observation is supported by single-crystal structures. In water, the quenching mechanism shifts toward resonance energy transfer and photo-induced electron transfer, after exciton migration as in chloroform. This study provides insight into florescence-quenching mechanisms for the selective sensing of NACs and reduces the ambiguity regarding the nature of interactions between the MOF and NACs.

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Sharma, A., Kim, D., Park, J. H., Rakshit, S., Seong, J., Jeong, G. H., … Lah, M. S. (2019). Mechanistic insight into the sensing of nitroaromatic compounds by metal-organic frameworks. Communications Chemistry, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42004-019-0135-2

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