Abstract

A pair of pyrene- and anthracene-based turn-on fluorescent probes (1 and 2, respectively) reported here can be easily synthesized in a single-step process and also exhibit outstanding sensing behavior toward hydrazine over various competing nucleophilic species and environmentally relevant ions. The probes display dramatic enhancements in the emission intensity with as high as 83- and 173-fold increases in the presence of hydrazine. Nitrogenous bases, thiols, and lanthanides do not interfere in the fluorometric detection. These probes enable the detection of hydrazine with the naked eye well below sub-ppm concentrations (ca. 30 ppb) with analytical detection limits of 5.4 ppb for 1 and 7.7 ppb for 2, which are far exceeded by the accepted lower limit for hydrazine (10 ppb) set by the US EPA. Simple paper strips based on these probes could be used for the detection of hydrazine even in the gas phase. Both of the probes could selectively detect hydrazine even in pond water samples efficiently. The probes were successfully applied to visualize, for the first time, accumulation of hydrazine in live fruit-fly larvae using epifluorescence microscopy. The novel and interesting detection mechanism, proposed on the basis of spectroscopic evidence and single crystal XRD results, indicates that the detection pathway proceeds via the initial step of a five-membered ring formation upon attack of the hydrazine, followed by a dehydration step for gaining aromaticity.

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