Abstract

A composite probe has been developed for fluorometric determination and imaging of phosphate in real water samples and in cells. The method is based on the use of weakly blue fluorescent bromine-doped carbon dots (C-dots) containing aromatic carbon-bromine groups and loaded with Fe3+ ions. The carboxy, phenolic hydroxy and aldehyde groups on the surface of the C-dots can coordinate with Fe3+ to form an adsorbed complex that reduces the blue fluorescence through an inner filter effect. If phosphate is added, it will capture Fe3+ on the surface of C-dots and restore fluorescence by ~88% via a displacement approach. The probe, best operated at excitation/emission maxima of 370/418nm, has a linear response in the 0.4 to 22μM phosphate concentration range and a 0.25μM of detection limit. The relative standard deviation (at a phosphate level of 8.0μM) is 3.6% (for n = 5). The method was applied to confocal imaging of phosphate in HeLa cells. Graphical abstractSchematic representation of the synthesis of bromine-doped carbon dots (C-dots) by a "one-step" approach. They are shown to be capable of (a) detecting phosphate in real water samples through the displacement approach, and (b) of imaging intracellular phosphate.

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