Nitrogen(N) and sulfur(S) codoped
carbon dots (N/S-CDs) are facilely
developed by a one-pot hydrothermal process from thiourea and o-phenylenediamine
as carbon precursors. The as-fabricated N/S-CDs reveal a high quantum
yield of 26% and a large Stokes shift up to 106 nm under the excitation
of 450 nm with good water dispersibility as well as antiphotobleaching.
With addition of Fe3+, fluorescence quenching happens with
a good linearity within 0.3–70 μM and a low detection
limit of 0.19 μM. However, the quenched fluorescence could be
rapidly recovered with the addition of monohydrogen phosphate ([HPO4]2–) due to formation of the stable complex
[Fe(HPO4)]+ by a competitive reaction between
the N/S-CDs-Fe3+ complex and [HPO4]2–, a good linearity is in the range of 0.3–60 μM with
a low detection limit of 0.27 μM. Thus, a significant “on–off–on”
fluorescence response is performed with obvious color change from
yellow-dark brown-yellow. In addition, the practical application and
the confocal microscopic images all suggest that the N/S-CDs could
target both Fe3+ and [HPO4]2– in living cells, implying that the N/S-CDs possess the diverse applications
for Fe3+ and [HPO4]2– recognitions
in biomedical fields.
Nitrogen doped carbon dots (N-CDs) have been prepared via a one-pot hydrothermal method by using formamide and o-phenylenediamine as the carbon precursors for Fe3+ and HPO42− detection.
A turn-on spiropyran functionalized fluorescein derivative (FMC) is developed for targeting HS- in mitochondria. FMC exhibits very weak fluorescence at 525 nm under the excitation of 470 nm in aqueous...
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