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Ratiometric Luminescent Sensor of Picric Acid Based on the Dual-Emission Mixed-Lanthanide Coordination Polymer.

Liang LiJiahui ChengZhipeng LiuLin SongYujian YouXin-Hui ZhouWei Huang
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2018)
Powerful explosive sensors play a key role in public security and environmental protection. Herein, we report a series of isostructural lanthanide coordination polymers [Ln2L1.5(NMP)2] n (LnL: Ln = Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, and Er; H4L = [1,1':4',1″-terphenyl]-2',4,4″,5'-tetracarboxylic acid; NMP = N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone) and mixed-Ln LnL (Eu xTb1- xL, Eu xGd1- xL, Tb xGd1- xL, and Eu xTb0.02- xGd0.98L). Luminescence studies show that both H4L and GdL emit strong fluorescence and phosphorescence at 77 K while only fluorescence at room temperature, and TbL exhibits strong Tb3+ characteristic emission, although the energy difference between the triplet excited state of H4L (20661 cm-1) and the 5D4 energy level of Tb3+ (20500 cm-1) is very small. By doping Eu3+ and Tb3+ into GdL, we obtained Eu xTb0.02- xGd0.98L emitting warm white light. For TbL and Tb0.01Gd0.99L showing dual emission, upon addition of picric acid (PA) into their suspensions in Tris-HCl buffer, Tb3+ emission decreases slowly; however, the ligand-based emission is sharply quenched, rendering TbL and Tb0.01Gd0.99L excellent single-lanthanide and mixed-lanthanide ratiometric luminescence PA sensor materials, respectively.
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