Abstract

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) as traditional electrochemiluminescence (ECL) luminophores have been widely applied in the analysis field. However, their ECL intensity and efficiency are still limited due to the aggregation-induced quenching (ACQ) effect of PAHs. Hence, to overcome this limitation, we put forward a new strategy to increase the ECL intensity and efficiency by eliminating the ACQ effect of PAHs through the coordinative immobilization of PAHs within metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). As anticipated, the proof-of-concept experiment indicated that the coordinative immobilization of perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxylate (PTC) into a Zn-PTC MOF could distinctly increase the ECL intensity and efficiency compared with H4PTC aggregates and H4PTC monomers. The reason for the ECL enhancement of Zn-PTC was that the immobilization of PTC within the MOF effectively amplified the distance between perylene rings of PTC ligands and thus eliminated the ACQ effect. Furthermore, the PTC into Zn-PTC was stacked in an edge-to-edge mode to form J-aggregation, which was also conducive to ECL enhancement. On the basis of the excellent ECL performance, we utilized Zn-PTC as a new ECL emitter combined with exonuclease III-stimulated target cycling and DNAzyme-assisted cycling dual amplification strategies to construct an ECL sensor for microRNA-21 detection, which had a wide signal response (100 aM to 100 pM) with a detection limit of 29.5 aM. Overall, this work represents a new and convenient method to overcome the ACQ effect of PAHs and boost the ECL performance, which opens a new horizon for developing high-performance ECL materials, thus offering more opportunities for building highly sensitive ECL biosensors.

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