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Specific Recognition of Hg 2+ and other Cations by a Hoechst33258@inverted Cucurbit[7]uril Fluorescence Probe Using Different pH Media
Author(s) -
Yang Meixiang,
Huang Ying,
Liu Ming,
Yang Mei X.,
Wang Qin,
Zeng Xi,
Xiao Xin,
Tao Zhu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
chemistryselect
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.437
H-Index - 34
ISSN - 2365-6549
DOI - 10.1002/slct.201901717
Subject(s) - chemistry , moiety , aqueous solution , lanthanide , fluorescence , alkali metal , piperazine , metal , inorganic chemistry , quenching (fluorescence) , chelation , stereochemistry , organic chemistry , ion , physics , quantum mechanics
A host‐guest inclusion complex comprising an inverted cucurbit[7]uril ( i Q[7]) and a biologically important dye, Hoechst‐33258 (H33258), was selected as a probe to test the response to various metal cations, including alkali metals, alkali earth metals, lanthanides, transition metals and other cations in aqueous HCl solution (pH=2) and NaOH solution (pH=11), respectively. The experimental results revealed that the host‐guest interaction showed a similar inclusion mode in the two selected aqueous solution conditions (pH=2 and 11), which was a dumbbell‐like inclusion complex in which one i Q[7] included the piperazine moiety, and another i Q[7] included the phenol moiety of H33258. The probe exhibited specific recognition of Hg 2+ cation in all metal systems containing Hg 2+ via obvious fluorescence quenching under acidic solution conditions. The probe also exhibited specific recognition of Al 3+ , Fe 3+ , Cr 3+ , and especially Ce 3+ cations in the lanthanide system via obvious fluorescence enhancement under basic solution conditions.