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Metal coordination in photoluminescent sensing

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TLDR
The design principles and coordination chemistry of metal probes based on mechanisms of PeT, PCT, ESIPT, FRET, and excimer formation will be discussed in detail, with particular attention given to rationales for the design of turn-on and ratiometric probes.
Abstract
Coordination chemistry plays an essential role in the design of photoluminescent probes for metal ions. Metal coordination to organic dyes induces distinct optical responses which signal the presence of metal species of interest. Luminescent lanthanide (Ln(3+)) and transition metal complexes of d(6), d(8) and d(10) configurations often exhibit unique luminescence properties different from organic dyes, such as high quantum yield, large Stokes shift, long emission wavelength and emission lifetimes, low sensitivity to microenvironments, and can be explored as lumophores to construct probes for metal ions, anions and neutral species. In this review, the design principles and coordination chemistry of metal probes based on mechanisms of PeT, PCT, ESIPT, FRET, and excimer formation will be discussed in detail. Particular attention will be given to rationales for the design of turn-on and ratiometric probes. Moreover, phosphorescent probe design based on Ln(3+) and d(6), d(8) and d(10)-metal complexes are also presented via discussing certain factors affecting the phosphorescence of these metal complexes. A survey of the latest progress in photoluminescent probes for identification of essential metal cations in the human body or toxic metal cations in the environment will be presented focusing on their design rationales and sensing behaviors. Metal complex-based photoluminescent probes for biorelated anions such as PPi, and neutral biomolecules ATP, NO, and H(2)S will be discussed also in the context of their metal coordination-related sensing behaviors and design approaches.

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Fluorescent Metal–Organic Frameworks for Selective Sensing of Toxic Cations (Tl3+, Hg2+) and Highly Oxidizing Anions ((CrO4)2−, (Cr2O7)2−, (MnO4)−)

TL;DR: The ligand 4,4'-(benzothiadiazole-4,7-diyl)dibenzoic acid was synthesized and employed for the synthesis of two metal-organic framework (MOF) compounds, which indicate a semiconducting nature with comparable behavior to well-known semiconductors such as CdSe, ZnTe, and GaP.
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Imaging two targets in live cells based on rational design of lanthanide organic structure appended carbon dots

TL;DR: In this paper, a new chemical sensors based on lanthanide emission that enable sequential detection of two targets in live cells have been developed, and the indicator molecules (unsaturated europium complexes) were covalently immobilized on carbon quantum dots (CQDs), and a water soluble fluorescent nano-probe with biocompatibility was fabricated.
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Metal-Dependent DNAzymes for the Quantitative Detection of Metal Ions in Living Cells: Recent Progress, Current Challenges, and Latest Results on FRET Ratiometric Sensors.

TL;DR: This Forum Article summarizes recent progress made in developing these DNAzyme sensors to probe metal ions in living cells and in vivo, including several challenges that were able to overcome for this application, such as DNAzyme delivery, spatiotemporal control, and signal amplification.
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Fluorometric and naked-eye detectable dual signaling chemodosimeter for hypochlorite

TL;DR: Phenanthroline dialdehyde appended sensor (PDS) has been designed and synthesized which displays an excellent selectivity as hypochlorite sensor in mixed aqueous medium as mentioned in this paper.
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