Login / Signup

Fluorescent Gold Nanocluster-Based Sensor Array for Nitrophenol Isomer Discrimination via an Integration of Host-Guest Interaction and Inner Filter Effect.

Hongwei YangFengniu LuYe SunZhiqin YuanChao Lu
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2018)
The rapid discrimination of nitrophenol isomers has been a long-standing challenge because of the tiny structural differences among the isomers. In this study, a fluorescent sensor array based on three different-color emitting gold nanoclusters (Au NCs) that were functionalized with three different ligands and a cocapping ligand β-cyclodextrin (β-CD) has been constructed for the facile discrimination of three nitrophenol isomers via the linear discriminant analysis of isomer-induced fluorescence quenching patterns. The fluorescence quenching occurs in two steps: first, β-CDs adsorb nitrophenol isomers onto the surface of Au NCs via a host-guest interaction; second, each nitrophenol isomer quenches the fluorescence of a specific type of Au NCs through diverse inner filter effect. The different binding affinities between β-CD and each nitrophenol isomer, as well as the distinct quenching efficiencies of the isomers on the fluorescence of each Au NCs, enable an excellent discrimination of the three isomers at a concentration of 5 μM, when linear discriminant and hierarchical cluster analyses were smartly combined. In addition, even a mixture of two isomers could be distinguished with the proposed sensor array. The practicability of this developed sensor array is validated by a high accuracy (98.0%) examination of 51 unknown samples containing a single isomer or a mixture of two isomers.
Keyphrases