Abstract

Increasing industrial demand has accelerated the consumption and contamination of palladium (Pd) worldwide. The implementation of fluorescent probes, especially with two-photon excitation, holds great promise for Pd detection in environmental and biological analysis. In this work, two naphthalimide (NPI)-boron-dipyrromethene (BDP) dyads (named NBH and NBN) were developed as two-photon fluorescent probes for Pd(0) detection based on an excitation energy transfer (EET) strategy, employing NPI as the energy donor and BDP as the acceptor. Spectroscopic studies revealed that both probes exhibited a fast response to Pd(0) in a pronounced fluorescence "ON-OFF" manner. The Pd-catalyzed Tsuji-Trost reaction activated an intramolecular photoinduced electron transfer (PET) process between the aniline and BDP moieties, resulting in the fluorescence quenching of the BDP fluorophore. The reaction-based probes exhibited excellent sensitivity and selectivity for Pd(0) species with a detection limit as low as 2.4 nM. These probes were successfully applied to the determination of Pd residues in drug, soil, and water samples. A simple smartphone-based platform was also constructed to determine Pd(0) via an RGB reader. With negligible cytotoxicity, confocal imaging study validated their feasibility of monitoring Pd(0) in living cells through multiple excitation channels.

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