posted on 2014-02-18, 00:00authored byXuewei Wang, Dengfeng Yue, Enguang Lv, Lei Wu, Wei Qin
The tremendous applications of boronic
acids (BAs) in chemical
sensing, medical chemistry, molecular assembly, and organic synthesis
lead to an urgent demand for developing effective sensing methods
for BAs. This paper reports a facile and sensitive potentiometric
sensor scheme for heterogeneous detection of BAs based on their unexpected
potential responses on quaternary ammonium salt-doped polymeric liquid
membranes. 11B NMR data reveal that a quaternary ammonium
chloride can trigger the hydrolysis of an electrically neutral BA
in an aprotic solvent. Using the quaternary ammonium salt as the receptor,
the BA molecules can be extracted from the sample solution into the
polymeric membrane phase and undergo the concomitant hydrolysis. Such
salt-triggered hydrolysis generates H+ ions, which can
be coejected into the aqueous phase with the counterions (e.g., Cl–) owing to their high hydrophilicities. The perturbation
on the ionic partition at the sample–membrane interface changes
the phase boundary potential and thus enables the potentiometric sensing
of BAs. In contrast to other transduction methods for BAs, for which
labeled or separate reporters are exclusively required, the present
heterogeneous sensing scheme allows the direct detection of BAs without
using any reporter molecules. This technique shows superior detection
limits for BAs (e.g., 1.0 × 10–6 M for phenylboronic
acid) as compared to previously reported methods based on colorimetry,
fluorimetry, and mass spectrometry. The proposed sensing strategy
has also been successfully applied to potentiometric indication of
the BA reactions with hydrogen peroxide and saccharides, which allows
indirect and sensitive detection of these important species.