Sensitive and selective detection
of hypochlorite is in great demand
for food safety, especially in fresh cold chain products. However,
the detection limit of traditional visible emission-based strategies
cannot satisfy the requirement of ultrasensitive analysis in practical
applications. In this work, we explored a novel luminescent nanoprobe
in the near-infrared-II (NIR-II) window to greatly improve the hypochlorite
detection limit for analysis of real milk samples, which was based
on the fluorescence resonance energy-transfer process between the
hypochlorite-responsive dye (FD1080) and the lanthanide-doped downconverted
nanoparticles. Specifically, the NIR-II luminescence from Yb ions
was first suppressed by FD1080 due to the energy-transfer mechanism.
In the presence of hypochlorite, FD1080 was bleached to recover the
luminescence. As a proof-of-concept, the optimal nanoprobe exhibited
a linear luminescence recovery in the range of 0.1–1 nM with
the detection limit of 0.0295 nM for hypochlorite. Real milk sample
detection experiments showed that the probe had good accuracy and
precision.
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