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A coumarin-dihydroperimidine dye as a fluorescent chemosensor for hypochlorite in 99% water.

Yasuhiro ShiraishiChiharu YamadaTakayuki Hirai
Published in: RSC advances (2019)
The hypochlorite anion (OCl - ), a reactive oxygen species (ROS), is an important microbicidal agent in the immune system. Accurate and selective detection of OCl - in environmental and biological samples by a fluorescent molecular sensor is an important subject. All previously reported sensors, however, have suffered from tedious multi-step synthesis for the sensors and the use of large amounts of organic solvents for the analysis. Herein, we report that a coumarin-dihydroperimidine dye prepared by facile condensation behaves as a fluorescent sensor for OCl - in 99% water. The sensor exhibits weak fluorescence, but OCl - -selective dehydrogenation of its dihydroperimidine unit creates a strong blue fluorescence. This turn-on fluorescence response facilitates selective and sensitive detection of OCl - in the physiological pH range. Ab initio calculation revealed that the fluorescence enhancement by OCl - is triggered by intramolecular proton transfer from the coumarin -OH to the imine nitrogen of the formed perimidine moiety.
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