1 research outputs found
Selective Fluorescence Sensing of Copper(II) and Water via Competing Imine Hydrolysis and Alcohol Oxidation Pathways Sensitive to Water Content in Aqueous Acetonitrile Mixtures
Addition
of hydrazines to a 1,8-disubstituted anthraquinone macrocycle containing
a polyether ring produces site-selective imination, where hydrazone
formation produces the more sterically hindered adduct. Reduction
of the remaining carbonyl group to a secondary alcohol followed by
addition of copperÂ(II) ion causes intense yellow fluorescence to occur,
which is selective for this metal cation and allows this system to
be used as a fluorescence sensor. In the presence of water, a green-fluorescent
intermediate appears, which slowly decomposes to produce the original
starting anthraquinone. The addition of a large amount of water radically
changes the reaction pathway. In this case, oxidation of the secondary
alcohol is kinetically faster than hydrolysis of the hydrazone, although
the same anthraquinone product is ultimately produced. Stern–Volmer
data suggest that dioxygen quenches the green emission through both
dynamic and static mechanisms; the static ground-state effect is most
likely due to association of oxygen with the copper-bound fluorescent
intermediate