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

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


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href="#ulink_1a2102c4-4b96-54df-b620-98299a2de1d3">Figure 4.6 (a) Chemical structures of polymers P1 and P2; (b) CVs (a and b) and ECL (a and b) of P‐1 Pdots (a and a) and P‐2 Pdots (b and b) modified GCE in 0.1 M pH 7.4 nitrogen saturated PBS. Scan rate: 100 mV/s for CV and 500 mV/s for ECL. PMT: 850 V; (c) Coreactant ECL; and (d) corresponding CVs of P‐1 Pdots (blue trace), P‐2 Pdots (red trace) modified GCE, and bare GCE (black trace) in 0.1 M pH 7.4 PBS in the presence of 0.1 M TPrA as anodic coreactant. Scan rate: 100 mV/s. PMT: 700 V.

      Source: Reproduced from Ref. [31].

      Compared to organic moieties, metal complexes result still the highest efficient luminophores in ECL and its application. Then, they have been also integrated into polymers as pendants of a polyvinylpyridine/polystyrene (PVP : PS) backbone for ECL applications since the end of the twentieth century [47, 61, 62, 73, 74]. But it is only since two years ago that it was developed from our group the nanoaggregation strategy to enhance their emission, especially in aqueous systems through the formation of PNPs [27]. These metallopolymers, based on iridium(III) centers, have been easily synthesized and the formation of the respective PNPs was done by nanoprecipitation in water starting from a bulk tetrahydrofuran (THF) solution. They have shown to enhance their φPL and lifetime without modifying the emission wavelength and the oxidation potential. Therefore, an enhancement in ECL was obtained with a signal 12× higher than the polymeric thin film onto glassy carbon (GC). This is attributable to the formation of a soft structure in which the emitting centers are preserved from external quenching agents like oxygen and water.

      Pdots and iridium‐based PNPs found, therefore, employment in the fabrication of disposable aptasensors where the enhanced ECL emission through aggregation could be significantly quenched or enhanced again from a secondary agent in affinity with the aptamer, leading to an “on–off” switch correlated to the concentration of the analyte [72, 75].

      The same concept of PNP has been employed to prepare a copolymer with two different iridium centers in order to have a functional material, which could sensitize through energy transfer of the lower‐energy emission with a further enhancement by up of five times compared with metallopolymers containing only one type of iridium center [39]. The energy transfer occurs following electrochemical excitation (ECL‐ET) of PNPs obtaining a material that shows strong emission in water thanks to the aggregated form.

      4.2.3 Organic Molecules

      Over the past decade, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) have been considered a fantastic class of emitters thanks to their low cost of production, structural tailorability, and excellent optoelectronic properties [78, 79]. Also, ECL was evaluated for PAHs with not satisfying results for their possible application, in particular, in biosensing [18, 70, 80]. These PAHs emitters were investigated usually in organic phase in nonaggregated form. The effect of an aggregation has been, therefore, studied with the advent of the AI‐ECL phenomenon.

      The first organic molecule investigated for AI‐ECL was made from coumarin derivatives in an aqueous solution [81]. A donor‐acceptor structure based on 6‐[4‐(N,N‐diphenylamino)phenyl]‐3‐ethoxycarbonyl coumarin (DPA‐CM) was reprecipitated in water from a THF solution in order to form nanoparticles of 5.82 nm. The resulting particles revealed a red‐shifted absorption and a blue‐shift in the emission spectra in water compared with the one in THF with an enhancement of the φPL in water of 6 rather than 0.8% in THF. The low φPL in organic solvent is ascribed to the structural flexibility of DPA‐CM, which is lost as nanoparticle [82] and to the intramolecular photoinduced electron transfer from DPA to CM [83]. By coating a GC electrode with DPA‐CM nanoparticles, the corresponding ECL emission during anodic scan was significantly enhanced with an outstanding reproducibility and lower standard deviation. The system was then employed for the detection of ascorbic acid (AA), uric acid (UA), and dopamine (DA) in an aqueous solution, which will be discussed in the applications and outlooks (Section 4.4).

Image described by caption.

      Source: Reproduced from Refs. [42, 43] The Royal Society of Chemistry.

      TPE nanocrystals (NCs) were also obtained by the same group, showing NIR enhanced ECL emission upon aggregation in aqueous solution, while it is invisible as a molecular entity in organic solvents (Figure 4.7d) [43]. The synthesis involved desolvation method for obtaining crystals of 450 nm (Figure 4.7e). For both MCs and NCs, triethylamine (TEA) was employed as a coreactant. From the spectral characterization and ECL studies, they give two possible options to explain the ECL enhancement: the first one follows the idea of a possible reduced energy gap when TPE molecules aggregate to form NCs, which allow highly efficient electron–hole recombination to obtain the excited state; the second possibility is that the restriction of intramolecular free rotation of phenyl ring reduces the nonradiative relaxations to obtain further ECL enhancement. Interestingly,


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