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Tuning the Photoinduced Electron Transfer in a Zr-MOF: Toward Solid-State Fluorescent Molecular Switch and Turn-On Sensor.

Bo GuiYi MengYang XieJianwu TianGe YuWeixuan ZengGuanxin ZhangShaolong GongChuluo YangDeqing ZhangCheng Wang
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2018)
The immobilization of fluorescent photoinduced electron transfer (PET) switches/sensors into solid state, which usually cannot maintain their identical properties in solution, has remained a big challenge. Herein, a water-stable anthracene and maleimide appended zirconium-based-metal-organic framework (Zr-MOF; UiO-68-An/Ma) is reported. Unlike the regular intramolecular "fluorophore-spacer-receptor" format, the separated immobilization of fluorescent (anthracene) and acceptor (maleimide) groups into the framework of a multivariate MOF can also favor a pseudo-intramolecular fluorescent PET process, resulting in UiO-68-An/Ma with very weak fluorescence. Interestingly, after Diels-Alder reaction or thiol-ene reaction of maleimide groups, the pseudo-intramolecular fluorescent PET process in UiO-68-An/Ma fails and the solid-state fluorescence of the crystals is recovered. In addition, UiO-68-An/Ma shows an interesting application as solid-state fluorescent turn-on sensor for biothiols, with the naked eye response at a low concentration of 50 µmol L-1 within 5 min. This study represents a general strategy to enable the efficient tuning of fluorescent PET switches/sensors in solid state, and considering the fluorescence of the PET-based MOFs can be restored after addition of analyte/target species, this research will definitely inspire to construct stimuli-responsive fluorescent MOFs for interesting applications (e.g., logic gate) in future.
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