Abstract
Copper nanoclusters (CuNCs) were synthesized starting from glutathione and copper(II) nitrate. They show blue fluorescence peaking at 432nm when excited at 334nm. In the presence of o-phenylenediamine (OPD), the blue fluorescence is decreased, but a yellow fluorescence appears with a peak at 557nm. UV-visible absorptiometry, fluorometry and fluorescence lifetime measurements were used to show that OPD is oxidized by the small fraction of copper(II) ions present in the CuNCs to form the oxidized form of o-phenylenediamine (oxOPD) which displays weak yellow fluorescence, while the blue fluorescence decreases. The ratio of fluorescences at 557 and 432nm increases linearly in the 0.15 to 110μg·L-1 OPD concentration range, and the detection limit is 93ng·L-1. Compared to the method based on the use of dissolved Cu(II), the employment of CuNCs reduces the detection limit by a factor of 40. The method was applied to the determination of OPD in spiked environmental water and industrial wastewater samples. Recoveries ranged from 96.8 to 100.3%. Graphical abstract Schematic presentation of a ratiometric fluorometric method for detection of o-phenylenediamine (OPD) based on copper nanoclusters (CuNCs). OPD is oxidized by Cu2+ present in CuNCs to form theoxidized form of o-phenylenediamine (oxOPD). FRET occurred between oxOPD and CuNCs, and the F557/F432 value is amplified.
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