Issue 11, 2012

An alternative approach: a highly selective dual responding fluoride sensor having active methylene group as binding site

Abstract

A newly designed phosphonium derivative (L) having active methylene functionality, shows unusual preference towards F over all other anions. The binding process through C–H⋯F hydrogen bond formation was probed by monitoring the changes in either electronic or luminescence spectra. Changes in both cases are significant enough to allow visual detection. The loss of molecular flexibility of L on forming L·F effectively interrupts the non-radiative deactivation pathway and accounts for the observed switch on fluorescence response. The results of the time-resolved emission studies for L and L·F using a time-correlated single photon counting technique further corroborate this presumption. The excellent preference of L towards F is attributed to an efficient hydrogen bonding interaction between the strongly polarized methylene protons and F, which delineates the subtle difference in the affinity among other competing anionic analytes like CN, H2PO4, CH3CO2, etc. The relative affinities of various anions and the preferential binding of F to reagent L are also rationalized using computational studies.

Graphical abstract: An alternative approach: a highly selective dual responding fluoride sensor having active methylene group as binding site

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
29 Oct 2011
Accepted
04 Jan 2012
First published
05 Jan 2012

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2012,10, 2263-2271

An alternative approach: a highly selective dual responding fluoride sensor having active methylene group as binding site

P. Das, M. K. Kesharwani, A. K. Mandal, E. Suresh, B. Ganguly and A. Das, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2012, 10, 2263 DOI: 10.1039/C2OB06815J

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