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Molecular rotors--fluorescent biosensors for viscosity and flow.

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TLDR
Molecular rotors are emerging as new biosensors for both bulk and local microviscosity, and for flow and fluid shear stress on a microscopic scale and with real-time response.
Abstract
Viscosity is a measure of the resistance of a fluid against gradients in flow (shear rate). Both flow and viscosity play an important role in all biological systems from the microscopic (e.g., cellular) to the systemic level. Many methods to measure viscosity and flow have drawbacks, such as the tedious and time-consuming measurement process, expensive instrumentation, or the restriction to bulk sample sizes. Fluorescent environment-sensitive dyes are known to show high sensitivity and high spatial and temporal resolution. Molecular rotors are a group of fluorescent molecules that form twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT) states upon photoexcitation and therefore exhibit two competing deexcitation pathways: fluorescence emission and non-radiative deexcitation from the TICT state. Since TICT formation is viscosity-dependent, the emission intensity of molecular rotors depends on the solvent's viscosity. Furthermore, shear-stress dependency of the emission intensity was recently described. Although the photophysical processes are widely explored, the practical application of molecular rotors as sensors for viscosity and the fluid flow introduce additional challenges. Intensity-based measurements are influenced by fluid optical properties and dye concentration, and solvent–dye interaction requires calibration of the measurement system to a specific solvent. Ratiometric dyes and measurement systems help solve these challenges. In addition, the combination of molecular rotors with specific recognition groups allows them to target specific sites, for example the cell membrane or cytoplasm. Molecular rotors are therefore emerging as new biosensors for both bulk and local microviscosity, and for flow and fluid shear stress on a microscopic scale and with real-time response.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Conformational Control of Ultrafast Molecular Rotor Property: Tuning Viscosity Sensing Efficiency by Twist Angle Variation

TL;DR: This is the first experimental demonstration of conformational control of small-molecule-based UMR efficiencies which can have wider implication toward development of fluorescence sensors based on the UMR principle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fluorescent Properties of 8-phenylBODIPY in Ethanol – Ethylene Glycol Mixed Solutions

TL;DR: Investigation of 8-phenyl substituted BODIPY found to exhibit properties of molecular rotor, and change in the nonradiative decay rate constant values with the increasing of viscosity indicates that the analyzed phenyl substituted complex is a true molecular rotor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fluorescent molecular rotors under pressure: synergistic effects of an inert polymer

TL;DR: In this paper, a meso-phenylene ring has been used as a fluorescent probe for monitoring changes in rheology of the surrounding environment, which is set in part by frictional forces with nearby solvent molecules.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical properties of two fluorene derived BODIPY molecular rotors as fluorescent ratiometric viscosity probes

TL;DR: In this article, the photophysical properties of two molecular rotors as ratiometric viscosity sensors, meso-(4-(9H-fluoren-2-yl)ethynyl)phenyl-4,4-difluoro-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene (1) and meso(5.9Hfluoren 2-yl), were reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synthesis and evaluation of self-calibrating ratiometric viscosity sensors

TL;DR: The design, synthesis and fluorescent profile of a family of self-calibrating dyes that provide ratiometric measurements of fluid viscosity that are based on covalently linking a primary fluorophore that displays a viscosities-independent fluorescence emission with a secondary fluorophores (sensor) that exhibits a Viscosity-sensitivefluorescence emission.
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