Hippuric acid-appended aminothiazole derivatives as ion-responsive metallogelators for visual detection of Ce3+
Abstract
A new class of hippuric acid-appended aminothiazole derivatives (1a–4a) were synthesized and systematically evaluated as potential ion-responsive gelators in the presence of lanthanides such as Ce3+, Pr3+, Sm3+, and Eu3+, as well as other metal ions. Most metal–ligand interactions resulted in precipitates, crystalline solids, or clear solutions; however, ligand 2a uniquely induced gelation upon exposure to Ce3+ ions. Substituent effects were found to be decisive: a methyl group at the 4-position of the thiazole ring strongly promoted gel formation, whereas methyl substitution at the 5-position, phenyl substitution, or the absence of a methyl group exerted a weaker influence. This selective ion responsive gelation establishes a simple supramolecular platform for Ce3+ recognition. Importantly, ligand 2a enables rapid, instrument-free, on-site visual screening of highly contaminated samples, offering a practical and environmentally relevant approach for qualitative or semi-quantitative monitoring. While not intended as a highly sensitive analytical method, this strategy highlights the trade-off between simplicity and detection limits compared to more sophisticated instrumental techniques, positioning it as a robust first-line tool for environmental sensing applications.

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