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Dual-Emission Fluorescent Silica Nanoparticle-Based Probe for Ultrasensitive Detection of Cu2+

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journal contribution
posted on 2011-04-15, 00:00 authored by Chenghua Zong, Kelong Ai, Guo Zhang, Hongwei Li, Lehui Lu
An effective dual-emission fluorescent silica nanoparticle-based probe has been constructed for rapid and ultrasensitive detection of Cu2+. In this nanoprobe, a dye-doped silica core served as a reference signal, thus providing a built-in correction for environmental effects. A response dye was covalently grafted on the surface of the silica nanoparticles through a chelating reagent for Cu2+. The fluorescence of the response dye could be selectively quenched in the presence of Cu2+, accompanied by a visual orange-to-green color switch of the nanoprobe. The nanoprobe provided an effective platform for reliable detection of Cu2+ with a detection limit as low as 10 nM, which is nearly 2 × 103 times lower than the maximum level (∼20 μM) of Cu2+ in drinking water permitted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The high sensitivity was attributed to the strong chelation of Cu2+ with polyethyleneimine (PEI) and a signal amplification effect. The nanoprobe constructed by this method was very stable, enabling the rapid detection of Cu2+ in real water samples. Good linear correlations were obtained over the concentration range from 1 × 10−7 to 8 × 10−7 (R2 = 0.99) with recoveries of 103.8−99.14% and 95.5−95.14% for industrial wastewater and lake water, respectively. Additionally, the long-wavelength emission of the response dye can avoid the interference of the autofluorescence of the biosystems, which facilitated their applications in monitoring Cu2+ in cells. Furthermore, the nanoprobe showed a good reversibility; the fluorescence can be switched “off” and “on” by an addition of Cu2+ and EDTA, respectively.

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