RESUMO
Films of three polymers, based on ethyl(hydroxyethyl)cellulose functionalized with protonated perichromic dyes, were used for anion sensing. The polymer functionalized with protonated Brooker's merocyanine acts as a chromogenic/fluorogenic system for the selective detection of cyanide in water. An increase of >28 times was verified for the fluorescence lifetime of the sensing units in the polymer in comparison with protonated Brooker's merocyanine in water. Moreover, an increase in the pKa values was verified for the sensing units in the polymers. Data suggest that the hydrocarbonic polymeric chains provide an adequate microenvironment to protect the sensing unit from bulk water. The other polymer, functionalized with an iminophenol, also showed high selectivity for cyanide (detection limit=9.36×10-6molL-1 and quantification limit=3.12×10-5molL-1). The polymer functionalized with azophenol units is unable for the detection of cyanide, due to the low pKa value verified for its chromogenic units.
RESUMO
Solutions of 2,4-dinitrodiphenylamine (1) in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) are colorless but upon deprotonation they become red. Addition of various anionic species (HSO(4)(-), H(2)PO(4)(-), NO(3)(-), CN(-), CH(3)COO(-), F(-), Cl(-), Br(-), and I(-)) to solutions of 1 revealed that only CN(-), F(-), CH(3)COO(-), and H(2)PO(4)(-) led to the appearance of the red color in solution. The presence of increasing amounts of water in solutions containing 1 made it progressively selective toward CN(-) and the system with the addition of 4.3% (v/v) of water was highly selective for CN(-) among all anions studied. The experimental data collected indicated that proton transfer from 1 to the anion occurs, and a model was used to explain the experimental results, which considers two 1:anion stoichiometries, 1:1 and 1:2. For the latter, the data suggest that the anion forms firstly a hydrogen-bonded complex with a second anion equivalent necessary for the abstraction of the proton, with the formation of a [HA(2)](-) complex. The study performed here demonstrates the important role of the environment of the anion and 1 for the efficiency of the chromogenic chemosensor. Besides the different affinities of each anion for water, the solvation of both the anion and 1 is responsible for reducing the interaction between these species. In small amounts, water or hydrogen-bonded DMSO-water complexes are able to stabilize the conjugated base of 1 through hydrogen bonding, making 1 more acidic, which explains the change from 1:1 and 1:2 toward 1:1 1:anion stoichiometry upon addition of water. In addition, water is able to solvate the anion and also 1, which hinders the formation of 1:1 hydrogen-bonded 1:anion complexes prior to the abstraction of the proton.