Surface Ligand Influences the Cu Nanoclusters as a Dual Sensing Optical Probe for Localized pH Environment and Fluoride Ion

Nanomaterials (Basel). 2023 Jan 28;13(3):529. doi: 10.3390/nano13030529.

Abstract

Functional metal nanomaterials, especially in the nanocluster (NC) size regime, with strong fluorescence, aqueous colloidal stability, and low toxicity, necessitate their application potential in biology and environmental science. Here, we successfully report a simple cost-effective method for red-/green-color-emitting protein/amino-acid-mediated Cu NCs in an aqueous medium. As-synthesized Cu NCs were characterized through UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy, time-resolved photoluminescence, dynamic light scattering, zeta potential, transmission electron microscopy and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The optical properties of both Cu NCs responded linearly to the variation in pH in the neutral and alkaline ranges, and a robust pH reversible nature (between pH 7 and 11) was observed that could be extended to rapid, localized pH sensor development. However, a contrasting pH response nature between protein-Cu NCs and amino acid-Cu NCs was recorded. The alteration in protein secondary structure and strong binding nature of the surfactants were suggested to explain this behavior. Furthermore, we investigated their use as an efficient optical probe for fluoride ion detection. The limit of detection for protein-Cu NCs is 6.74 µM, whereas the limit of detection for amino acid-Cu NCs is 4.67 µM. Thus, it is anticipated that ultrasmall Cu NCs will exhibit promise in biological and environmental sensing applications.

Keywords: L-cysteine; bovine serum albumin; copper nanoclusters; fluoride ion detection; pH sensor.

Grants and funding

SC thank SRM University, AP research funding (SRMAP/URG/E&PP/2022-23/014) for financial support.