Qian
Wang
a,
Qiao
Liu
a,
Xiao-Meng
Du
a,
Bo
Zhao
a,
Yue
Li
*ab and
Wen-Juan
Ruan
*ab
aCollege of Chemistry, Nankai University, No. 94 of Weijin Road, Tianjin 300071, China. E-mail: wjruan@nankai.edu.cn; liyue84@nankai.edu.cn
bKey Laboratory of Advanced Energy Materials Chemistry (Ministry of Education), Nankai University, Tianjin 300071, China
First published on 9th December 2019
With multiple signal channels, array sensing can effectively improve detection selectivity, but at the cost of increasingly complex analytical operation and decreased repeatability. Herein, we propose a “single MOF-based sensor array” in which a white-light-emitting MOF is used to provide multiple response channels with its manifold emission bands to overcome these drawbacks; the potential of this strategy was verified by the discrimination of berberine homologues (a sub-class of isoquinoline-type alkaloids). A white-light-emitting MOF was synthesized by the incorporation of three luminescent ligands into the UiO-66 backbone. With distinct response behaviors, these components could produce a three-channel signal pattern for the analyte. Thus, this MOF realized array sensing with a single measurement of its spectrum. Its discrimination limit for berberine homologues was as low as 2 μM, and by combination with chemical titration, this MOF could identify samples with unknown concentrations. This work demonstrates the advantage of white-light-emitting MOFs in array sensing.
Inspired by mammal olfactory systems, the concept of array sensing may represent an effective way to solve this problem.11 Instead of a specific sensor, this technique uses a group of sensing elements to produce a unique response pattern for one analyte. With multiple signal channels, the structural discrimination capability of array sensing is greatly improved.12–14 A combination of array sensing with MOF fluorescent detection was reported very recently and has already shown great potential. Some difficult tasks, such as the distinction of nitro explosives15 and the detection of H2O in D2O,16 were achieved by this method. However, in array sensing methods, the responses of a group of sensors must be measured; therefore, the analytical operation and time are multiplied in comparison with single sensor analysis. Moreover, inconsistency of sensor preparation and multiple sets of fluorescence measurements can potentially impair the repeatability of the analysis.
The integration of the functions of sensors, in other words, using a sensor with multiple response channels, is a potential way to overcome these drawbacks. In this way, only a few sensors or even a single sensor must be prepared and measured. This strategy has not yet been applied to MOFs but has been reported with other sensing materials. For example, Yu et al. regarded the fluorescence, light scattering and absorption changes of an Au–Ag composite as three signal channels for the discrimination of sulfur species.17 Hormozi-Nezhad and co-workers used the colorimetric responses of Au nanoparticles at different pH values and salt concentrations to distinguish organophosphate pesticides.18 However, because the signals were of different types or were obtained under different conditions in these studies, multiple measurements were still needed. Array sensing with a single measurement is still highly desirable.
White-light-emitting (WLE) MOFs, an actively investigated sub-class of luminescent MOFs,19,20 provide a promising candidate to realize this purpose. WLE MOFs present several emission bands with balanced intensities. The change in each emission band can be viewed as a signal channel. Thus, with a single measurement of its fluorescence spectrum, a WLE MOF can provide a set of response data. As a proof-of-concept trial of this strategy, in this work, we synthesized a WLE MOF by the incorporation of three luminescent ligands into the framework of UiO-66. Based on the distinct response behaviors of these components, this MOF produced a unique three-channel signal pattern for each analyte. Five berberine homologues were clearly identified using the MOF.
Powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) patterns were recorded on a Rigaku D/max-2500 diffractometer with Cu Kα radiation (λ = 0.15406 nm) at 40 kV and 100 mA. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images were taken using a JEOL JSM-7500F scanning electron microscope. 1H NMR spectra were collected by a Bruker 400 MHz NMR spectrometer with chemical shifts reported as ppm. Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectra were recorded using a TENSOR Fourier transform infrared spectrometer. N2 adsorption–desorption experiments were performed using a Micrometrics ASAP 2460 system at 77 K, and the samples were degassed at 80 °C for 5 h before measurement. Steady state fluorescence experiments were carried out on an Agilent G9800A fluorescence spectrometer, and an SPVF-1X0 accessory was used to control the sample temperature at 25 °C. Absorption spectra were taken using a Shimadzu UV-2450 spectrophotometer. Fluorescence lifetimes were measured with an Edinburgh FLS-920 spectrometer.
We firstly optimized the ratio of BDC-NH2 to BDC-diOH. In the absence of TCPP, different proportions of these two ligands were reacted with ZrCl4 to obtain a series of MOF samples. PXRD patterns demonstrated the good crystallinity and phase purity of the products (Fig. 1a and Fig. S2a, ESI†). The actual BDC-NH2/BDC-diOH molar ratios in the MOFs were measured by 1H NMR spectra (Fig. 1b and Fig. S3a, ESI†), and according to the results (Table S1, ESI†), these samples are denoted as UiO-66-(NH2)x(diOH)1−x (x = 1, 0.72, 0.69, 0.62, 0.52, 0.37 and 0). SEM observation showed that these samples were composed of octahedron particles with narrow size distributions (Fig. 1c and Fig. S4a, ESI†). With increasing BDC-diOH proportion, the particle size decreased from 200 to 50 nm. The photoluminescence of these samples was directly tested in their aqueous suspensions. As expected, all the mixed-ligand MOFs exhibited dual-emission properties (Fig. 2a). The fluorescent peaks at 428 and 540 nm are characteristic of the BDC-NH2 and BDC-diOH ligands, respectively. The CIE coordinate of the band at 428 nm was calculated to be (0.1540, 0.0564), which is close to the coordinate of (0.14, 0.08) for a saturated blue emitter. In contrast, the 540 nm peak remarkably deviates from the characteristic green emission, and its CIE coordinate falls into the yellow-green region. With decreasing BDC-NH2/BDC-diOH ratio, the fluorescent band at 428 nm weakened, while the emission intensity at 540 nm was enhanced. As a result, the CIE coordinates of the mixed-ligand MOFs were located between the points of UiO-66-NH2 and UiO-66-diOH. Although the emission of BDC-diOH appears at a longer wavelength, its absorption spectrum has no overlap with the emission band of BDC-NH2 (Fig. S5, ESI†); therefore, energy transfer between these two components is impossible. This assumption was further confirmed by transient fluorescence experiments (Fig. S6, ESI†). The emission lifetimes of BDC-NH2 and BDC-diOH in the mixed-ligand MOF (15.71 and 4.77 ns, respectively) were nearly the same as those in the samples constructed purely from a single ligand (τUiO-66-NH2 = 15.62 ns; τUiO-66-diOH = 4.68 ns), which indicates that the electronic transitions of these two ligands do not interfere with each other. Based on these results, we attribute the change of emission spectrum with MOF composition to the competition between BDC-NH2 and BDC-diOH for the excitation energy. It was noted that among these samples, UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38 presented cyan emission (Fig. 2d), which is complementary to the color red. Its CIE coordinate was also closest to the white light region. Hence, we used this sample as the starting point for TCPP incorporation.
TCPP was incorporated simply by addition of this compound to the synthetic mixture of UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38. The incorporation amounts of TCPP were also quantified by 1H NMR spectra, and these samples are labeled as TCPPy⊂UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38 (y is the molar ratio of TCPP to the total amount of the original two ligands, Table S1, ESI†). As evidenced by the PXRD patterns, 1H NMR spectra and SEM images, TCPP did not affect the crystallinity, BDC-NH2/BDC-diOH ratio or morphology of UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38 when its incorporation amount was lower than 10% (Fig. S2b, S3b and S4b, ESI†). Above this limit, TCPP induced the formation of impurity phase. Because of the low incorporation amount, TCPP caused only a negligible change in the micropore structure of the MOF (Fig. S7, ESI†). In the FT-IR spectrum of the product (Fig. 1d), no peak was shown in the range of 1690 to 1730 cm−1, indicating that the carboxyl groups of TCPP were completely deprotonated and that this component functioned as an accessory ligand. Due to its existence in this form, TCPP exhibited good stability in the MOFs. The immersion of the sample in organic solvents (methanol, acetone and DMSO) or saturated salt solutions (NaCl, KNO3 and Na2SO4) caused no leakage of TCPP (or the two other ligands) or changes in the crystallinity of the MOFs (Fig. S8, ESI†).
In the photoluminescence spectra, TCPP gave a new emission band with a maximum at 645 nm (Fig. 2b). With increasing TCPP amount, this band was enhanced, while the intensity of the fluorescence from BDC-NH2 and BDC-diOH decreased. We noted that the quenching extent of BDC-NH2 was more remarkable than that of BDC-diOH. Considering the overlap of the emission spectrum of BDC-NH2 with the Soret band of porphyrin (Fig. S5, ESI†) as well as its red-shift after TCPP incorporation, we assume that in addition to competitive absorption, the weakened fluorescence of BDC-NH2 is partly caused by energy transfer to TCPP. This process was proved by the shortened fluorescence lifetime of BDC-NH2 in TCPPy⊂UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38 (Fig. S6, ESI†). Then, we calculated the CIE coordinates of the samples. It was observed that when the TCPP amount was increased to 9%, the CIE coordinates shifted to (0.3012, 0.3063), close to the pure white light coordinates of (0.33, 0.33). Therefore, a WLE MOF was obtained through the above modulations (Fig. 2c and d). Composed of three broad bands, the fluorescence spectrum of this MOF covered the whole visible range; therefore, a high color rendering index (CRI) of 91 was obtained. Although dozens of WLE MOFs have been reported to date, most of them were designed by co-doping of Ln ions27 and embedding of dye molecules.28 Low CRI and potential leakage of the dye guest are the respective drawbacks of these two types of materials. To the best of our knowledge, before our work, only Telfer's group developed a WLE MOF with pure ligand-centered fluorescence in which the used luminescent ligands were specifically designed.29 TCPP0.09⊂UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38 is the second member of this new category of WLE MOFs. Additionally, all three luminescent components of our MOF are commercially available. The facile acquisition of raw materials greatly lowers the cost and simplifies the synthetic procedure of the MOF.
Scheme 1 Structures of the tested alkaloids (the compounds causing fluorescent responses of the MOF are marked in red). |
Due to the distinct response behaviors of the three luminescent components of TCPP0.09⊂UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38, this MOF provides a three-signal fingerprint pattern toward each analyte. The pattern response data obtained above (3 emission bands × 9 alkaloids × 5 replicates, Table S3, ESI†) were firstly treated as the training matrix by linear discriminant analysis (LDA), a supervised statistical technique that aims to project the dataset onto a lower-dimensional space. Three canonical factors, which account for 83.9%, 15.6% and 0.5% of the total variance, were generated from these data. The first two canonical factors were visualized as a 2D score plot, as shown in Fig. 3c. The data points of the five berberine homologues were gathered as five tight clusters with substantial separations between each other. Even the 95% confidence ellipses of these compounds showed no overlap. As a result, the jackknifed classification matrix demonstrated 100% accuracy in the discrimination of all 25 trials of berberine homologues (Table S4, ESI†). The other four alkaloids barely affected the fluorescence of the MOF; therefore, their groups were overlapped and gathered in a small region far from those of the berberine homologues. This result indicates that these compounds cannot interfere with the discrimination of berberines. To further explore the recognition capability of TCPP0.09⊂UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38, hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA), another supervised differentiating method, was used as an alternative way to treat the raw fluorescence data (Fig. 3d). The five berberine homologues and other unresponsive alkaloids were classified into six different clustering groups, demonstrating the clear distinction of berberines from each other as well as from the interferences.
To estimate the discrimination limit of this “single sensor sensor array”, a series of berberine homologue samples with lower concentrations (20, 10, 5 and 2 μM) were measured with it (Fig. S12, ESI†). As shown in the 2D score plots of LDA (Fig. 4), with decreasing analyte concentration, the clusters of the berberine homologues approached each other. In the plot of 2 μM, the 95% confidence ellipses of jatrorrhizine and berberrubine already showed a large degree of overlap, although the discrimination accuracy of these two compounds was still 100%. Therefore, we conclude that the concentration minimum for the correct classification of berberine homologues is as low as 2 μM. In previous work regarding the multi-target detection ability of WLE MOFs, changes in the emission color were used as the signal to distinguish different analytes.30,31 Similar to these studies, we also calculated the CIE coordinates of the MOF sensor upon exposure to the berberine homologues. However, even at the analyte concentration of 50 μM (the highest value used in the LDA measurements), the emission color change was still negligible (Fig. S13a, ESI†). This result is not surprising considering that the analyte concentrations and structural differences among the analytes in our work were much smaller than in previous reports. The minimum concentration of berberines to induce a discriminable fluorescence color change was determined to be 200 μM (Fig. S13b, ESI†). The failure of color discrimination proves the necessity to apply the statistical methods of LDA and HCA, which maximize the differences among analyte signals.
Fig. 4 LDA plots for the discrimination of berberine homologues at (a) 20, (b) 10, (c) 5 and (d) 2 μM with five parallel measurements. |
The above qualification experiments were carried out with fixed analyte concentrations. However, for most samples encountered in practical analysis, the target concentration is unknown. Therefore, the identification of samples with unknown concentrations is an advanced and more practical challenge. We proposed a procedure of quantification followed by qualification to solve this problem. We noted that, as with berberine, its four homologues also formed precipitates with K2Cr2O7, probably due to their similar structures. This observation indicates that the concentrations of these four compounds can be quantified by the same titration method as berberine. Then, the sample would be diluted to the concentration of the LDA pattern and classified with it. The robustness of this two-step method was examined by blind experiments. Fifteen berberine homologue samples (5 analyte × 3 concentration) were randomly prepared as unknowns (both the identity and concentration were blind to the analyzer) and analyzed (Table S5, ESI†). Again, 100% accuracy was obtained in the identification of these samples. This result also confirms that TCPP0.09⊂UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38 can distinguish berberine homologues with a high degree of confidence.
To test the performance of TCPP0.09⊂UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38 in the analysis of complex samples, a series of berberine and berberrubine mixtures with different molar ratios were prepared and measured with it. Each mixture, as well as pure berberine and berberrubine, presented a unique response pattern and could be clearly distinguished in the LDA and HCA plots (Fig. S14, ESI†).
Finally, the potential of this “single sensor sensor array” for practical analysis was evaluated. Because plants are the major producers and sources of alkaloids, the extract of an herb, coptidis rhizome, was used as an example for these experiments. The response of our WLE MOF sensor to coptidis rhizome extract was measured in the absence and presence of berberine homologues (50 μM), respectively. The extract itself and five spiked samples were clearly clustered into six groups by LDA and HCA (Fig. 5), showing that complex plant compositions cannot interfere with analyte identification.
Fig. 5 (a) LDA and (b) HCA plots for TCPP0.09⊂UiO-66-(NH2)0.62(diOH)0.38 (50 mg L−1) against berberine homologues (50 μM) in coptidis rhizome extract. |
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Fluorescent spectra of ligands, PXRD patterns, SEM images and 1H NMR spectra of all the samples prepared during WLE modulation, effect of TCPP incorporation on MOF channel structure, structure and emission stability of MOF sensor, results of transient fluorescent experiments, comparison among the emission spectra of luminescent components and the absorption spectra of analytes and the calculated spectral integrals, CIE chromaticity diagrams of MOF sensor upon the exposure to berberines, analytical results of berberines mixtures, and raw data of array sensing measurements. See DOI: 10.1039/c9tc05180e |
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