Handbook of Aggregation-Induced Emission, Volume 3. Группа авторов

Читать онлайн книгу.

Handbook of Aggregation-Induced Emission, Volume 3 - Группа авторов


Скачать книгу
of ECL applications, dubbed the ion annihilation (Figure 4.2) and the coreactant approaches (Figure 4.3). The latter can be further classified into oxidative‐reductive ECL or reductive‐oxidative ECL.

Schematic illustration of the electron transfer reactions responsible for emission during annihilation ECL. Schematic illustration of the electron transfer reactions responsible for emission during a coreactant ECL reaction: on the left the oxidative-reductive pathway, on the right side the reductive–oxidative pathway.

      (4.4)equation

      Most annihilation ECL materials are organometallic complexes, and only one report has shown an AI‐ECL generated by annihilation pathway, which consists of a donor‐acceptor conjugated polymer dot (Pdot) and it will be elucidated in Section 4.3.2 [31].

      All the other reports on AI‐ECL, involve the coreactant mechanisms, which not only are easier to operate but also cover the major research direction of possible applications in biosensing. Indeed, the ECL coreactant mechanism is the basis of all commercially available instruments [32].

      Considering one potential step generation, coreactant ECL shows several advantages over annihilation ECL. First, there is no need for a wide potential window so other solvents with a narrow potential window and aqueous solution can be also used. Further, there is no need of rigorously purified and deoxygenated solvents because oxygen and water quenching are less efficient. Thus, a reaction can be carried out in the air. Finally, the use of coreactant makes ECL possible even for some fluorophores that have only a reversible electrochemical oxidation or reduction, while annihilation ECL, in general, requires both of them.

      A coreactant is a species that upon electrochemical oxidation or reduction undergoes fast chemical decomposition to form a high‐energy reducing or oxidizing intermediate. The latter can react with an oxidized or reduced luminophore to generate excited states (Figure 4.3).

      (4.6)equation

      (4.7)equation

      (4.8)equation

      This is a typical case of an electron transfer chemical reaction (EC′) reaction [40], which has been extensively discussed by Bard et al. [33]. By applying the anodic potential, the AS is first oxidized to AS+ at the electrode surface. This cation is then capable of oxidizing C2O42− in the diffusion layer close to the electrode surface to form an oxalate radical anion C2O4•−, which decomposes to a highly reducing anion radical CO2•− and carbon dioxide. The excited state AS* can be obtained by direct reaction between CO2•− and the oxidized AS+.

      Also, to generate AI‐ECL the employment of trialkylamines was chosen many times, and examples will be clarified in Section 4.3 [42–44].) Coreactant ECL using trialkylamines can proceed through several possible parallel routes. One pathway for AS‐TPrA coreactant ECL is represented by the following reactions [12, 45, 46]:

      (4.10)equation