Detection of Explosive Vapors: The Roles of Exciton and Molecular Diffusion in Real-Time Sensing

Chemphyschem. 2016 Nov 4;17(21):3350-3353. doi: 10.1002/cphc.201600767. Epub 2016 Sep 1.

Abstract

Time-resolved quartz crystal microbalance with in situ fluorescence measurements are used to monitor the sorption of the nitroaromatic (explosive) vapor, 2,4-dinitrotoluene (DNT) into a porous pentiptycene-containing poly(phenyleneethynylene) sensing film. Correlation of the nitroaromatic mass uptake with fluorescence quenching shows that the analyte diffusion follows the Case-II transport model, a film-swelling-limited process, in which a sharp diffusional front propagates at a constant velocity through the film. At a low vapor pressure of DNT of ≈16 ppb, the analyte concentration in the front is sufficiently high to give an average fluorophore-analyte separation of ≈1.5 nm. Hence, a long exciton diffusion length is not required for real-time sensing in the solid state. Rather the diffusion behavior of the analyte and the strength of the binding interaction between the analyte and the polymer play first-order roles in the fluorescence quenching process.

Keywords: conjugated polymers; explosives; fluorescence; sensors; time-resolved spectroscopy.