Aggregation-induced emissive fluorogens (AIEgens) are promising building blocks for fluorescent polymeric hydrogels (FPHs) because intense fluorescence intensities are usually guaranteed by spontaneous aggregates of hydrophobic AIEgens in a hydrophilic polymer network. However, most AIE-active FPHs are single-color fluorescent and cannot display tunable emission colors. Additionally, efforts to produce mechanically strong AIE-active hydrogels have been largely ignored, restricting their potential uses. Herein, we present the synthesis of an AIE-active methyl picolinate-substituted 1,8-naphthalimide monomer (MP-NI) for fabricating mechanical tough and multicolor FPHs. Owing to the introduction of bulky and coordinative methyl picolinate group, these specially designed MP-NI molecules were forced to adopt propeller-shaped conformation that renders them with intense aggregation-induced blue emission. Moreover, the MP-NI moieties grafted in a hydrogel matrix can sensitize red and green fluorescence of Eu 3+ and Tb 3+ via antenna effect. Consequently, multicolor fluorescent hydrogels that sustain a high stress of 1 MPa were obtained by chemically introducing MP-NI moieties into dually cross-linked alginate polymer networks with high-density metal (Ca 2+ /Tb 3+ /Eu 3+ ) coordination and hydrogen bonding crosslinks. Their capacity to enable the writing of arbitrary multicolor fluorescent patterns using Eu 3+ /Tb 3+ as inks were finally demonstrated, suggesting their potential uses for smart display and information encryption.
Keyphrases
- living cells
- drug delivery
- fluorescent probe
- quantum dots
- single molecule
- drug release
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- energy transfer
- wound healing
- high density
- flow cytometry
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- extracellular matrix
- cancer therapy
- label free
- metal organic framework
- risk assessment
- light emitting
- molecular docking
- healthcare
- health information
- mass spectrometry
- quality improvement
- human health
- molecular dynamics simulations