Abstract

Aggregation-induced electrochemiluminescence (AIECL) technology has aroused widespread interest due to the significant improve in ECL response by solving the problems of aggregation-caused quenching and poor water solubility of the luminophore. However, the existing AIECL emitters still suffer from low ECL efficiency, additional coreactants and complex synthesis steps, which greatly limit their applications. Herein, luminol, as a kind of AIE molecule, was assembled with Zn2+ nodes to obtain a novel microflower-like Zinc-luminol metal-organic gel (Zn-MOG) by one-step method. In the light of the strong affinity of N atoms in luminol ligand to Zn2+, Zn-MOG with vigorous viscosity and stability can be formed immediately after vortex oscillation, overcoming the main difficulties of the complicated synthesis steps and poor film-forming performance encountered in current AIECL materials. Impressively, an AIECL resonance energy transfer (RET) biosensor was constructed using Zn-MOG as a donor and Alexa Fluor 430 as an acceptor in combination with DNA-Fuel-driven target recycling amplification for the ultrasensitive detection of PiRNA-823. The fabricated biosensor exhibited a wide linear relationship in the range of 100 aM to 100 pM and a detection limit as low as 60.0 aM. This work is the first to realize the construction of ECL emitters using the AIE effect of luminol, which provides inspiration for the design of AIECL systems without adding coreactants.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call