Abstract

Conventional fluorophores suffer from low sensitivity and selectivity in amine detection due to the inherent limitations in their "one-to-one" stoichiometric sensing mechanism. Herein, we propose a "one-to-many" chain reaction-like sensing mechanism by creating a domino chain consisting of one fluorescent molecule (e.g., PTF1) and up to 40 nonemissive polymer chains (pPFPA) comprising over thousand repeating units (PFPA). PTF1 (the domino trigger) interacts with adjacent PFPA units (the following blocks) through polar-π interactions and initiates the domino effect, creating effective through-space conjugation along pPFPA chains and generating amplified yellow fluorescent signals through charge transfer between PTF1 and pPFPA. Amine exposure causes rapid dismantling of the fluorophore-pPFPA-based domino chain and significantly reduces the amplified emissions, thus providing an ultrasensitive method for detecting amines. Relying on the above merits, we achieve a limit of detection of 177 ppq (or 1.67 × 10-12 M) for triethylamine, which is nearly 4 orders lower than that of previous methods. Additionally, the distinct reactivity of pPFPA toward different amines allows for the discrimination of primary, secondary, and tertiary amines. This study presents a "domino effect" sensing mechanism that has not yet been reported and provides a general approach for chemical detection that is beyond the reach of conventional methods.

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