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  • Detection of azo dyes using carbon dots from olive mill wastes
    Publication . Sousa, Diogo A.; Berberan-Santos, Mario; Prata, José Virgílio
    Azo dyes are widely spread in our day life, being heavily used in cosmetics, healthcare products, textile industries, and as artificial food colorants. This intense industrial activity, which inherently includes their own production, inexorably leads to uncontrolled release of dyes into the environment. As emerging pollutants, their detection, particularly in water systems, is a priority. Herein, a fluorescence-based method was employed for the sensitive and selective detection of anionic and neutral azo dyes. Carbon dots (CDs) synthesized from wet pomace (WP), an abundant semi-solid waste of olive mills, were used as probes. An outstanding capability for detection of azo dyes methyl orange (MO) and methyl red (MR) in aqueous solutions was disclosed, which reached a limit of detection (LOD) of 151 ppb for MO. The selectivity of WP-CDs for the anionic azo dye (MO) was established through competitive experiments with other dyes, either anionic (indigo carmine) or cationic (fuchsin, methylene blue, and rhodamine 6G); perchlorate salts of transition metal cations (Cu(II), Co(II), Fe(II), Fe(III), Hg(II), and Pb(II)); and sodium salts of common anions (NO3-, CO32-, Cl-, and SO42-). Evidence has been collected that supports static quenching as the main transduction event underlying the observed quenching of the probe's fluorescence, combined with a dynamic resonance energy transfer (RET) mechanism at high MO concentrations.
  • Carbon nanodots from olive mill wastewater: a sustainable route
    Publication . Sousa, D. A.; Costa, Alexandra; Alexandre, M. R.; Prata, José Virgílio
    Olive oils are obtained from the fruit of the olive tree (Olea europaea L.) by combined mechanical and physical operations. Portugal has a significant production of olive oil (76 k tonnes/year over the last 5 years, 2010-2015) [1]. Olive oil is typically obtained by two main processes: batch press and continuous centrifugation. Depending on the particular process used, 200-1600 L of olive mill wastewater (OMWW) is produced per tonne of processed olives. Taken the lowest of these values, an estimate points to around 15 million L of OMWW may be produced each year in Portugal. The OMWW exhibits very low biodegradability parameters which pose serious issues for its treatment. Sustainable production of high-valued carbon materials from industrial lowvalued and problematic wastes is particularly appealing and highly desirable.
  • Metal ion recognition induced by calix[4]arene carbazole containing polymers
    Publication . D. Barata, Patrícia; Costa, Alexandra; Fialho, Carina B.; Prata, José Virgílio
    Sensing and recognition of ions and neutral molecules via synthetic receptors are of current interest in supramolecular chemistry because of their significant importance in several areas, such as chemistry, biology and environment. Compared with small molecules, polymers-based sensors displayed several importante advantages like signal amplification. In this way, the incorporation of molecular receptors such as calixarenes with conjugated polymer backbones is expected to enhance the signaling events related to a host–guest interaction. The preorganized binding sites, easy derivatization and flexible three-dimensional steric structures make calixarenes ideal construction platforms for molecular design to generate fluorescente receptors. The use of calixarenes as supramolecular scaffolds for this type of architectures has been explored and the sensing abilities of resultant polymers toward metal and molecular ions established. Based on the high sensitivity shown by the non-polymeric analogue CALIX-OCP-CBZ (notshown), to toxic metal cations, we decide two extend the sensing study to polymer materials. Herein, we report the preliminar results of the chemosensing ability of a new bicyclic calix[4]arene-carbazole-polymer (CALIX-OCP-PPE-CBZ) towards the detection of toxic metals in fluid phase.
  • Solid-state sensory properties of Calix-Poly(Phenylene Ethynylene)s toward nitroaromatic explosives
    Publication . Costa, Alexandra; Pinto, Hugo D.; Ferreira, Luís F. V.; Prata, José Virgílio
    This study is primarily focused in establishing the solid-state sensory abilities of several luminescent polymeric calix[4]arene-based materials toward selected nitroaromatic compounds (NACs), creating the foundations for their future application as high performance materials for detection of high explosives. The phenylene ethynylene-type polymers possessing bis-calix[4]arene scaffolds in their core were designed to take advantage of the known recognition abilities of calixarene compounds toward neutral guests, particularly in solid-state, therefore providing enhanced sensitivity and selectivity in the sensing of a given analyte. It was found that all the calix[4]arene-poly(para-phenylene ethynylene)s here reported displayed high sensitivities toward the detection of nitrobenzene, 2,4-dinitrotoluene and 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT). Particularly effective and significant was the response of the films (25-60 nm of thickness) upon exposure to TNT vapor (10 ppb): over 50% of fluorescence quenching was achieved in only 10 s. In contrast, a model polymer lacking the calixarene units showed only reduced quenching activity for the same set of analytes, clearly highlighting the relevance of the macrocyclics in promoting the signaling of the transduction event. The films exhibited high photostability (less than 0.5% loss of fluorescence intensity up to 15 min of continuous irradiation) and the fluorescence quenching sensitivity could be fully recovered after exposure of the quenched films to saturated vapors of hydrazine (the initial fluorescence intensities were usually recovered within 2-5 min of exposure to hydrazine).
  • Fostering protein-calixarene interactions: from molecular recognition to sensing
    Publication . Prata, José Virgílio; D. Barata, Patrícia
    Two isomeric bis-calixarene-carbazole conjugates (CCC-1 and CCC-2) endowed with carboxylic acid functions at their lower rims have been found to display a high sensing ability (KSV up to 6 x 10(7) M-1) and selectivity toward cytochrome c, a multi-functional protein, in an aqueous-based medium. After targeting basic amino acid residues on the protein surface residing near the prosthetic heme group through electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions, a rapid photoinduced electron transfer ensues between the integrated transduction element (aryleneethynylene chromophore) of CCCs and the iron-oxidized heme of cytochrome c, enabling direct detection of the protein at nanomolar levels. Our results show that CCCs are capable of efficiently discriminating heme proteins (cytochrome c vs. myoglobin) and non-heme proteins (lysozyme) in an aqueous medium. Studies performed in two solvent systems (organic and aqueous) strongly suggest that in an organic medium a Forster-type resonance energy transfer is responsible for the observed reduction in CCCs emission upon contact with heme proteins while in an aqueous medium a specific photoinduced electron transfer mechanism prevails.
  • Chiroptical and emissive properties of a calix[4]arene-containing chiral poly (P-phenylene ethynylene) with enantioselective recognition ability
    Publication . Prata, José Virgílio; Costa, Alexandra; Pescitelli, Gennaro; Pinto, Hugo D.
    Supramolecular chirality was achieved in solutions and thin films of a calixarene-containing chiral aryleneethynylene copolymer. The observed chiroptical activity, which is primarily allied with the formation of aggregates of high molecular weight polymer chains, is the result of a combination of intrachain and interchain effects. The former arises by the adoption of an induced helix-sense by the polymer main-chain while the latter comes from the exciton coupling of aromatic backbone transitions. The co-existence of bulky bis-calixKlarene units and chiral side-chains on the polymer skeleton prevents efficient pi-stacking of neighbouring chains, keeping the chiral assembly highly emissive. In contrast, for a model polymer lacking calixarene moieties, the chiroptical activity is dominated by strong interchain exciton couplings as a result of more favourable packing of polymer chains, leading to a marked decrease of photoluminescence in the aggregate state. The enantiomeric recognition abilities of both polymers towards (R)- and (S)-alpha-methylbenzylamine were examined. It was found that a significant enantiodiscrimination is exhibited by the calixarene-based polymer in the aggregate state.
  • How an environmental issue could turn into useful high-valued products: the olive mill wastewater case
    Publication . Sousa, D. A.; Costa, Alexandra; Alexandre, M. R.; Prata, José Virgílio
    Carbon-based nanomaterials have been directly synthesized fromolivemillwastewaters (OMWWs) for the first time, using expedite and simple environmental-friendly procedures. The OMWWs collected from a mill operating by a two-phase centrifugation system, after being heated (150–300 °C) solely or in the presence of additives for 2–12 h, furnished nanostructuredmaterials in high yields. Under an optimised set of reaction conditions here described, the resultant as-synthetized aqueous dispersions of carbon nanoparticles exhibit outstanding fluorescence emission properties, which encompass an astonishing quantum yield (ΦF N 0.4). The as-prepared carbon nanomaterials show excitation-dependent emissions covering the whole visible spectrum, with a predominant high glow in the blue-green region, and a remarkable photostability. The relevant features attained by the nanomaterials here reported, allied to their easy synthesis and carbon source affordability, render them with unique capabilities to be used in several current and emerging technological applications, namely in bioimaging and nanomedicine, sensorial analysis, (photo)catalysis and optoelectronics. The as-synthesized nanoparticles show a remarkable high sensitivity and selectivity towards haemoglobin.
  • Synthesis, structure, and optical properties of an alternating calix[4]arene-based meta-linked phenylene ethynylene copolymer
    Publication . D. Barata, Patrícia; Costa, Alexandra; Ferreira, Luis F. V.; Prata, José Virgílio
    Novel alternating copolymers comprising biscalix[4]arene-p-phenylene ethynylene and m-phenylene ethynylene units (CALIX-m-PPE) were synthesized using the Sonogashira-Hagihara cross-coupling polymerization. Good isolated yields (60-80%) were achieved for the polymers that show M-n ranging from 1.4 x 10(4) to 5.1 x 10(4) gmol(-1) (gel permeation chromatography analysis), depending on specific polymerization conditions. The structural analysis of CALIX-m-PPE was performed by H-1, C-13, C-13-H-1 heteronuclear single quantum correlation (HSQC), C-13-H-1 heteronuclear multiple bond correlation (HMBC), correlation spectroscopy (COSY), and nuclear overhauser effect spectroscopy (NOESY) in addition to Fourier transform-Infrared spectroscopy and microanalysis allowing its full characterization. Depending on the reaction setup, variable amounts (16-45%) of diyne units were found in polymers although their photophysical properties are essentially the same. It is demonstrated that CALIX-m-PPE does not form ground-or excited-state interchain interactions owing to the highly crowded environment of the main-chain imparted by both calix[4]arene side units which behave as insulators inhibiting main-chain pi-pi staking. It was also found that the luminescent properties of CALIX-m-PPE are markedly different from those of an all-p-linked phenylene ethynylene copolymer (CALIX-p-PPE) previously reported. The unexpected appearance of a low-energy emission band at 426 nm, in addition to the locally excited-state emission (365 nm), together with a quite low fluorescence quantum yield (Phi = 0.02) and a double-exponential decay dynamics led to the formulation of an intramolecular exciplex as the new emissive species.
  • New entities for sensory chemistry based on calix[4]arene-carbazole conjugates: from synthesis to applications
    Publication . Barata, Patrícia; Prata, José Virgílio
    Two new calix[4]arene-carbazole conjugates (CALIX-CBZs) comprising 2- and 3-ethynyl-substituted carbazole derivatives attached to a central bis-calix[4]arene-containing phenylene ring have been designed for fluorescence-based detection of high explosive materials and explosive markers in vapour phase. The title compounds were prepared in good isolated yields and structurally fully characterised. CALIX-CBZs are highly fluorescent compounds that largely preserve their deep blue luminescence in solid state with no notorious emissions from electronic aggregated states. The excellent optical properties exhibited by casted films of both materials, including their photochemical stability, suggested their potential use as solidstate sensors. Remarkable high and fast responses were in fact retrieved upon contact with saturated vapours of 2,4,6trinitrotoluene (TNT, a high explosive) and 2,4-dinitrotoluene (a common impurity in TNT batches, often used as its chemical marker), reaching near 80% of fluorescence quenching for the later on 30s of exposure. Experiments performed with nitroaliphatic compounds (nitromethane (NM), a liquid explosive and 2,3-dimethyl-2,3-dinitrobutane, an explosive taggant) also revealed a high level of sensitivity (up to near 40% fluorescence quenching in only 10s of exposure to NM). The quenching efficiencies were overall correlated with the extent and strength of CALIX-CBZs–analyte interactions, the vapour pressure of the analytes and the film thicknesses.
  • Bright nanoparticles for an even brighter future: efficient production of luminescent carbon nanodots from olive mill wastewater
    Publication . Sousa, D. A.; Costa, Alexandra; Alexandre, M. R.; Prata, José Virgílio
    Carbon nanodots (CNDs) are a very recent class of spherical-shaped nanosized carbon materials possessing average typical diameters < 10 nm. Since the very first reports on carbon dots,1,2 a variety of methods (top-down and bottom-up strategies), carbon sources and passivating agents, have dealt with their synthesis.3 The bottom-up approach, encompassing the use of pyrolytic/solvothermal processes, is more amenable for large-scale production and can cope with a large diversity of carbon precursors, either from natural or synthetic sources, typically endowed with acid, alcohol and amine functionalities.4 Some of the interesting CNDs properties include tunable photoluminescence, outstanding photostability and negligible cytotoxicity. These unique properties have prompted their intense and widespread use in several fields, such as fluorescent bioimaging and nanomedicine, chemo/biosensing, photocatalysis and optoelectronics.4