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The synthesis of a chemically reactive and polymeric luminescent gel

In the past, chemically reactive polymeric interfaces have been considered to be of potential interest for developing functional materials for a wide range of practical applications. Furthermore, the rational incorporation of luminescence properties into such chemically reactive interfaces could pro...

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Autores principales: Baruah, Upama, Manna, Uttam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8179304/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34163973
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sc05166g
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author Baruah, Upama
Manna, Uttam
author_facet Baruah, Upama
Manna, Uttam
author_sort Baruah, Upama
collection PubMed
description In the past, chemically reactive polymeric interfaces have been considered to be of potential interest for developing functional materials for a wide range of practical applications. Furthermore, the rational incorporation of luminescence properties into such chemically reactive interfaces could provide a basis for extending the horizon of their prospective utility. In this report, a simple catalyst-free chemical approach is introduced to develop a chemically reactive and optically active polymeric gel. Branched-polyethyleneimine (BPEI)-derived, inherently luminescent carbon dots (BPEI-CDs) were covalently crosslinked with pentaacrylate (5Acl) through a 1,4-conjugate addition reaction under ambient conditions. The synthesized polymeric gel was milky white under visible light; however, it displayed fluorescence under UV light. Additionally, the residual acrylate groups in the synthesized fluorescent gel allowed its chemical functionality to be tailored through facile, robust 1,4-conjugate addition reactions with primary-amine-containing small molecules under ambient conditions. The chemical reactivity of the luminescent gel was further employed for a proof-of-concept demonstration of portable and parallel ‘ON’/‘OFF’ toxic chemical sensing (namely, the sensing of nitrite ions as a model analyte). First, the chemically reactive luminescent gel derived from BPEI-CDs was covalently post-modified with aniline for the selective synthesis of a diazo compound in the presence of nitrite ions. During this process, the color of the gel under visible light changed from white to yellow and, thus, the colorimetric mode of the sensor was turned ‘ON’. In parallel, the luminescence of the gel under UV light was quenched, which was denoted as the ‘OFF’ mode of the sensor. This parallel and unambiguous ‘ON’/‘OFF’ sensing of a toxic chemical (nitrite ions, with a detection limit of 3 μM) was also achieved even in presence of other relevant interfering ions and at concentrations well below the permissible limit (65 μM) set by the World Health Organization (WHO). Furthermore, this chemically reactive luminescent gel could be of potential interest in a wide range of basic and applied contexts.
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spelling pubmed-81793042021-06-22 The synthesis of a chemically reactive and polymeric luminescent gel Baruah, Upama Manna, Uttam Chem Sci Chemistry In the past, chemically reactive polymeric interfaces have been considered to be of potential interest for developing functional materials for a wide range of practical applications. Furthermore, the rational incorporation of luminescence properties into such chemically reactive interfaces could provide a basis for extending the horizon of their prospective utility. In this report, a simple catalyst-free chemical approach is introduced to develop a chemically reactive and optically active polymeric gel. Branched-polyethyleneimine (BPEI)-derived, inherently luminescent carbon dots (BPEI-CDs) were covalently crosslinked with pentaacrylate (5Acl) through a 1,4-conjugate addition reaction under ambient conditions. The synthesized polymeric gel was milky white under visible light; however, it displayed fluorescence under UV light. Additionally, the residual acrylate groups in the synthesized fluorescent gel allowed its chemical functionality to be tailored through facile, robust 1,4-conjugate addition reactions with primary-amine-containing small molecules under ambient conditions. The chemical reactivity of the luminescent gel was further employed for a proof-of-concept demonstration of portable and parallel ‘ON’/‘OFF’ toxic chemical sensing (namely, the sensing of nitrite ions as a model analyte). First, the chemically reactive luminescent gel derived from BPEI-CDs was covalently post-modified with aniline for the selective synthesis of a diazo compound in the presence of nitrite ions. During this process, the color of the gel under visible light changed from white to yellow and, thus, the colorimetric mode of the sensor was turned ‘ON’. In parallel, the luminescence of the gel under UV light was quenched, which was denoted as the ‘OFF’ mode of the sensor. This parallel and unambiguous ‘ON’/‘OFF’ sensing of a toxic chemical (nitrite ions, with a detection limit of 3 μM) was also achieved even in presence of other relevant interfering ions and at concentrations well below the permissible limit (65 μM) set by the World Health Organization (WHO). Furthermore, this chemically reactive luminescent gel could be of potential interest in a wide range of basic and applied contexts. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2020-12-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8179304/ /pubmed/34163973 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sc05166g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Baruah, Upama
Manna, Uttam
The synthesis of a chemically reactive and polymeric luminescent gel
title The synthesis of a chemically reactive and polymeric luminescent gel
title_full The synthesis of a chemically reactive and polymeric luminescent gel
title_fullStr The synthesis of a chemically reactive and polymeric luminescent gel
title_full_unstemmed The synthesis of a chemically reactive and polymeric luminescent gel
title_short The synthesis of a chemically reactive and polymeric luminescent gel
title_sort synthesis of a chemically reactive and polymeric luminescent gel
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8179304/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34163973
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0sc05166g
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