4.8 Review

Development of responsive visibly and NIR luminescent and supramolecular coordination self-assemblies using lanthanide ion directed synthesis

Journal

COORDINATION CHEMISTRY REVIEWS
Volume 273, Issue -, Pages 226-241

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.ccr.2014.03.023

Keywords

Supramolecular chemistry; Self-assembly; Lanthanides; Luminescent; Sensors; Probes; Materials

Funding

  1. Science Foundation Ireland
  2. CSCB
  3. PRTLI for Cycle 4
  4. Irish Research Council (IRC and IRCSET)
  5. Enterprise Ireland (El)
  6. Kinerton Ltd. (Now Ibsen Ltd.)

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This review details the progress made in our laboratory in Dublin within the area of supramolecular lanthanide chemistry; where the main objective has been to develop functional lanthanide luminescent systems that emit within the visible or the near-infrared regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. The application of the lanthanide-centred assembly is two-fold, firstly to use it for sensing application of biologically and environmentally relevant anions, and secondly to use the emission to report on the formation of lanthanide directed self-assembly processes. This review begins with the progress made from the use of lanthanide cyclen (1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane) complexes: to develop: displacement assays for sensing or probing applications; for their incorporations onto gold nanoparticles where the lanthanide emission can be 'switched on-off' by external stimuli; and their application in the formation of mixed f-d metal ion based self-assemblies and sensors and imaging agents for DNA. The second part of this review focuses on the development of self-assemblies formed using 2,6-diamidopyridyl based ligands. A variety of ligands are presented that have been employed in the formation of chiral self-assembly bundles, dimetallic triple stranded helicates and Langmuir-Blodgett films that give rise to circularly polarised luminescence. The formation of such organised self-assembly monolayers of water-air interface brings us to the last topic of this review, along with the formation of novel soft-material such as gels, where the lanthanide emission is employed to report on the formation of three dimensional supramolecular structures, and their application as 'nano-gardens' in growing ionic structures with novel morphologies. (C) 2014 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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