Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry University of North Bengal Darjeeling 734013 India
2. Department of Chemistry Siliguri College Siliguri Darjeeling 734001 India
3. Department of Chemistry Alipurduar University Alipurduar 736122 India
Abstract
AbstractA chromone‐coupled adenine‐based fluorogenic chemosensor (BD1) has been introduced for cascade detection of Zn2+ and HSO4−ions or Zn2+ and picric acid (PA) based on the fluorescence ‘OFF‐ON‐OFF’ mechanism. A momentous fluorescence improvement has been observed due to the accumulation of Zn2+ ions in the BD1 solution because of the formation of the Zn2+ chelated BD1 complex. A cyan color fluorescence enhancement is visible under the exposure of a 365 nm UV lamp, which is also manifested in the CIE diagram. The detection limit of our developed sensor BD1 and Zn2+−BD1 complex towards the identification of Zn2+ and HSO4− ions are in the nM and μM range, respectively, in the solution phase. Among the several explosive nitroaromatic compounds (NACs), only PA quenches the fluorescence of the Zn2+ chelated BD1 complex, and the nature of quenching is both static and dynamic. A paper strips‐based test kit experiment is performed for on‐spot identification of Zn2+ ions and PA. Based on these chemically encoded inputs and the fluorescence intensity as optical output, we have constructed an INHIBIT molecular logic circuit. The present report evokes a new approach for the development of new chemosensors from bioinspired materials such as adenine, a purine nucleobase.