Dual-emitting fluorescent chemosensor based on resonance energy transfer from poly(arylene ether nitrile) to gold nanoclusters for mercury detection

2016 
Abstract A dual-emitting fluorescent chemosensor has been designed for sensitive and specific detection of Hg 2+ . The principle of this chemosensor is based on the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) which employs blue intrinsically fluorescent poly(arylene ether nitrile) (FPEN) and red-emitting gold nanoclusters (Au NCs) as energy donor and acceptor, respectively. Firstly, two FPENs with different repeating units ( homo -FPEN and co -FPEN) in backbone were synthesized to optimize the FRET efficiency. Specifically, homo -FPEN was polymerized to contain twofold carboxyl moieties in main chain than that of co -FPEN. The steady state and transient fluorescent spectroscopy indicated that FRET with higher efficiency could be obtained by using homo -FPEN as an optimized energy donor. Furthermore, the optimized sensor platform ( homo -FPEN/Au NCs) displayed a dramatic emitting color changing from pink to blue upon Hg 2+ exposure, leading to specific determination of 10 nM Hg 2+ by fluorometric detection. The performance of proposed chemosensor was validated by its competitive responses to several common metal ions and efficient application in real environmental samples (tap water and lake water spiked with Hg 2+ ). More interestingly, the fluorescent nanofiber mat was fabricated by electron spinning of FPEN solution, which exhibited naked-eye discrimination of 10 μM Hg 2+ aqueous solution after adsorption of Au NCs. Therefore, the easily regenerated fluorescent nanofibers based on FPEN and Au NCs with fast, sensitive and specific responses open a new way for the development of robust chemosensor for Hg 2+ detection.
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