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1.
ACS Appl Bio Mater ; 5(6): 2990-3005, 2022 06 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35579235

ABSTRACT

Here, four nontraditional fluorescent polymers (NTFPs) of varying N,N-dimethyl-2-propenamide (DMPA) and butyl prop-2-enoate (BPE) mole ratios, i.e., 2:1 (NTFP1), 4:1 (NTFP2), 8:1 (NTFP3), and 16:1 (NTFP4), are prepared via random polymerization in water. The maximum fluorescence enhancement of NTFP3 makes it suitable for ratiometric pH sensing, Cu(II) sensing, and pH-dependent cell imaging of Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells. The oxygen donor functionalities of NTFP3 involved in binding and sensing with Cu(II) ions are studied by absorption, emission, electron paramagnetic resonance, Fourier transform infrared (FTIR), and O1s/Cu2p X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies (XPS). The spectral responses of the ratiometric pH sensor within 1.5-11.5 confirm 22 and 44 nm red shifts in absorption and ratiometric emission, respectively. The striking color changes from blue (436 nm) to green (480 nm) via an increase in pH are thought to be the stabilization of the charged canonical form of tertiary amide, i.e., -C(O-)═N+(CH3)2, realized from the changes in the absorption/fluorescence spectra and XPS/FTIR analyses. The through-space n-π* interactions in the NTFP3 aggregate, N-branching-associated rigidity, and nonconventional intramolecular hydrogen bondings of adjacent NTFP3 moieties in the NTFP3 aggregate contribute to aggregation-enhanced emissions (AEEs). Here, structures of NTFP3, NTFP3 aggregate, and Cu(II)-NTFP3; absorption; n-π* interactions; hydrogen bondings; AEEs; and binding with Cu(II) are ascertained by density functional theory, time-dependent density functional theory, and reduced density gradient calculations. The excellent limits of detection and Stern-Volmer constants of NTFP3 are 2.24 nM/0.14234 ppb and 4.26 × 103 M-1 at pH = 6.5 and 0.95 nM/0.06037 ppb and 4.90 × 103 M-1 at pH = 8.0, respectively. Additionally, the Stokes shift and binding energy of NTFP3 are 13,636 cm-1/1.69 eV and -4.64 eV, respectively. The pH-dependent MDCK cell imaging ability of noncytotoxic NTFP3 is supported via fluorescence imaging and 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide assay.


Subject(s)
Optical Imaging , Polymers , Animals , Dogs , Hydrogen , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Optical Imaging/methods , Polymers/chemistry , Spectrometry, Fluorescence
2.
ACS Omega ; 5(7): 3333-3345, 2020 Feb 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32118148

ABSTRACT

The intrinsically fluorescent highly hydrophilic multifunctional aliphatic terpolymer, maleic acid (MA)-co-2-(N-(hydroxymethyl)acrylamido)succinic acid (NHASA)-co-N-(hydroxymethyl)acrylamide (NHMA), that is, 1, was designed and synthesized via C-C/N-C-coupled in situ allocation of a fluorophore monomer, that is, NHASA, composed of amido and carboxylic acid functionalities in the polymerization of two nonemissive MA and NHMA. The scalable and reusable intrinsically fluorescent biocompatible 1 was suitable for sensing and high-performance adsorptive exclusion of Fe(III), along with the imaging of Madin-Darby canine kidney cells. The structure of 1, in situ fluorophore monomer, aggregation-induced enhanced emission, cell-imaging ability, and superadsorption mechanism were studied via microstructural analyses using 1H/13C NMR, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, atomic absorption spectroscopy, ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy, thermogravimetric analysis, dynamic light scattering, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, solid-state fluorescence, fluorescence lifetime, and fluorescence imaging, along with measuring kinetics, isotherms, and thermodynamic parameters. The location, electronic structures, and geometries of the fluorophore and absorption and emission properties of 1 were investigated using density functional theory and natural transition orbital analyses. The limit of detection and the maximum adsorption capacity were 2.45 × 10-7 M and 542.81 mg g-1, respectively.

3.
ACS Omega ; 4(1): 421-436, 2019 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31459340

ABSTRACT

For initiating a prosperous cost-friendly waste management of small-scale industries, cow buffing dust (CBD), one of the abundantly available semisynthetic collagenic solid wastes, has been used as a nonsulfur cross-linker of natural rubber (NR) for fabricating an NRCBD-biocomposite superadsorbent. The as-prepared reusable biocomposite bearing variegated collagenic and noncollagenic N-donors, along with the O-donors, has been reported for ligand-selective preferential superadsorption from waste water. Thus, a CBD and NR-based scalable biocomposite bearing optimum cross-linking, excellent physicochemical properties, and reusability has been developed via systematic optimization of the torque and reaction time for cost-friendly adsorptive exclusion of dyes, such as 2,8-dimethyl-3,7-diamino-phenazine (i.e., safranine, SF) and (7-amino-8-phenoxazin-3-ylidene)-diethylazanium dichlorozinc dichloride (i.e., brilliant cresyl blue), BCB, and Hg(II). The CBD-aided curing of NR has been achieved through the formation of a cross-linked chromane-ring originated via reaction between the methylol-phenol ring of phenol-formaldehyde resin and isoprene unit of NR. The partial disappearance of unsaturation in cured-NRCBD, relative variation of crystallinity, surface properties, elevated thermal stabilities, and ligand-selective superadsorption have been studied by advanced microstructural analyses of unadsorbed and/or adsorbed NRCBD using Fourier transform infrared (FTIR), 13C nuclear magnetic resonance, ultraviolet-visible, and O 1s-/N 1s-/C 1s-/Hg 4f7/2,5/2-X-ray photoelectron spectroscopies, thermogravimetric analysis, differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray diffraction, field emission scanning electron microscopy, energy-dispersive spectroscopy, and pHPZC. Response surface methodology-based optimization has been employed to attain the optimum potential of NRCBD, considering the interactive effects between pHi, temperature, and concentration of the dye. H-aggregate and time-dependent hypochromic effect has been observed during individual adsorption of dyes. Moreover, the prevalence of chemisorption via ionic interaction between NRCBD and SF, BCB, and Hg(II) has been realized by FTIR, fitting of kinetics data to the pseudosecond-order model, and measurement of activation energies. The Brunauer-Emmett-Teller and Langmuir isotherms fit the best to BCB and SF/Hg(II), respectively. Thermodynamically spontaneous chemisorption have shown the maximum adsorption capacities of 303.61, 46.14, and 166.46 mg g-1 for SF, BCB, and Hg(II), respectively, at low initial concentration of Hg(II)/dyes = 40 ppm, 303 K, and adsorbent dose = 0.01 g.

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