Litcius/Paper detail

Spatial Confinement Tunes Cleavage and Re‐Formation of C=N Bonds in Fluorescent Molecules

Keyan Liu, Xuezhi Qiao, Chuanhui Huang, Xiao Li, Zhenjie Xue, Tie Wang

2021Angewandte Chemie International Edition40 citationsDOI

Abstract

Molecules in confined spaces exhibit unusual behaviors that are not typically observed in bulk systems. Such behavior can provide alternative strategies for exploring new reaction pathways. Cleavage of the C=N bond of Nile red (NR) in solution is an irreversible reaction. Here, we used spatial confinement within a cationic micelle-confined system to convert this reaction to a reversible process. The fluorescence of NR shifted between red and green for nine cycles. The new chemical pathway based on spatial confinement can be attributed to two factors: increasing the local concentration of reactants and reducing the reaction energy barrier. This effect is supported by both experimental evidence and theoretical calculations. The cross-linked silica shell comprising the confinement chamber stabilizes the enclosed molecules. This reduces fluorophore leakage and maintains fluorescence intensity in most environments, including in solution, on paper, and in hydrogel films, and expands practical applications in encrypted information and multi-informational displays.

Topics & Concepts

FluorophoreNile redFluorescenceMoleculeChemistryChemical physicsCationic polymerizationPhotochemistryCleavage (geology)MicelleNanotechnologyMaterials sciencePhysical chemistryOpticsOrganic chemistryAqueous solutionPhysicsFracture (geology)Composite materialLuminescence and Fluorescent MaterialsMolecular Sensors and Ion DetectionSupramolecular Chemistry and Complexes