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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth J. Harbron is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth J. Harbron.


Analytical Chemistry | 2012

Ratiometric Fluorescence Detection of Mercury Ions in Water by Conjugated Polymer Nanoparticles

Elizabeth S. Childress; Courtney A. Roberts; Desmarie Y. Sherwood; Clare L.M. LeGuyader; Elizabeth J. Harbron

We present dye-doped polymer nanoparticles that are able to detect mercury in aqueous solution at parts per billion levels via fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). The nanoparticles are prepared by reprecipitation of highly fluorescent conjugated polymers in water and are stable in aqueous suspension. They are doped with rhodamine spirolactam dyes that are nonfluorescent until they encounter mercury ions, which promote an irreversible reaction that converts the dyes to fluorescent rhodamines. The rhodamine dyes act as FRET acceptors for the fluorescent nanoparticles, and the ratio of nanoparticle-to-rhodamine fluorescence intensities functions as a ratiometric fluorescence chemodosimeter for mercury. The light harvesting capability of the conjugated polymer nanoparticles enhances the fluorescence intensity of the rhodamine dyes by a factor of 10, enabling sensitive detection of mercury ions in water at levels as low as 0.7 parts per billion.


Langmuir | 2014

Functionalization of conjugated polymer nanoparticles for fluorescence photomodulation.

Christian F. Chamberlayne; Elena A. Lepekhina; Brooklynd D. Saar; Kathryn A. Peth; Jordan T. Walk; Elizabeth J. Harbron

The emission of conjugated polymer nanoparticles (CPNs or Pdots) is often tailored for specific uses by functionalizing CPNs with dyes that act as fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) acceptors. A number of dye functionalization methods for CPNs have been developed, ranging from simple noncovalent doping to covalent attachment. We seek to develop guidelines for when noncovalent doping is acceptable and when covalent attachment is necessary to achieve the desired result. We present results of CPNs functionalized with photochromic spirooxazines by four different methods: simple doping, doping with an amphiphilic coating polymer, covalent functionalization prior to CPN formation, and covalent functionalization after CPN formation. The different CPNs are evaluated in terms of their fluorescence photomodulation properties to determine how the preparation method affects the CPN-dye photophysical interactions. Doping preparations yield the most efficient quenching of CPN emission due to shorter donor-acceptor distances in these CPNs compared to those with covalently tethered dyes. Aging studies reveal that the photochromic dyes in doped samples degrade over time to a far greater extent than those in covalently functionalized samples. These results suggest that dye-doped CPNs are appropriate for short-term experiments where highly efficient FRET is desired while covalent dye functionalization is a better choice for experiments executed over an extended time frame.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2017

Tuning the pKa of Fluorescent Rhodamine pH Probes via Substituent Effects

Sarah G. Stratton; Grace H. Taumoefolau; Grace E. Purnell; Mona Rasooly; William L. Czaplyski; Elizabeth J. Harbron

Rhodamine spirolactams (RSLs) have recently emerged as popular fluorescent pH probes due to their fluorescence turn-on capability and ease of functionalization at the spirolactam nitrogen. Design of RSLs is often driven by biological targeting or compatibility concerns, rather than the pH sensitivity of the probe, and the relationship between RSL structure and pKa is not well understood. To elucidate the relationship between pKa values and the properties of substituents attached to the spirolactam nitrogen, a series of 19 aniline-derived RSLs is presented. RSLs derived from di-ortho-substituted anilines exhibit pKa tunability across the moderately acidic region (ca. pH 4-6). Evaluation of pKa data using the Fujita-Nishioka model for ortho substituent effects reveals that both steric and electronic substituent properties influence RSL pH responsiveness, with pKa values increasing as substituent size and electron withdrawing character increase. These trends are attributed to changes in the RSL structure induced by large substituents, and to electronic influences on the protonated spirocyclic reaction intermediate. To demonstrate the practical applicability of these probes in completely aqueous environments, RSL-doped conjugated polymer nanoparticles that exhibit a ratiometric fluorescence response to changing pH levels are presented.


Molecules | 2017

Fluorescence Modulation of Green Fluorescent Protein Using Fluorinated Unnatural Amino Acids

Jordan K. Villa; Hong-Anh Tran; Megha Vipani; Stephanie Gianturco; Konark Bhasin; Brent L. Russell; Elizabeth J. Harbron; Douglas D. Young

The ability to modulate protein function through minimal perturbations to amino acid structure represents an ideal mechanism to engineer optimized proteins. Due to the novel spectroscopic properties of green fluorescent protein, it has found widespread application as a reporter protein throughout the fields of biology and chemistry. Using site-specific amino acid mutagenesis, we have incorporated various fluorotyrosine residues directly into the fluorophore of the protein, altering the fluorescence and shifting the pKa of the phenolic proton associated with the fluorophore. Relative to wild type GFP, the fluorescence spectrum of the protein is altered with each additional fluorine atom, and the mutant GFPs have the potential to be employed as pH sensors due to the altered electronic properties of the fluorine atoms.


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2009

Photochromic Dye-Doped Conjugated Polymer Nanoparticles: Photomodulated Emission and Nanoenvironmental Characterization

Elizabeth J. Harbron; Christina M. Davis; Joshua K. Campbell; Rebecca M. Allred; Marissa T. Kovary; Nicholas J. Economou


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2011

Ensemble and Single-Particle Fluorescence Photomodulation in Diarylethene-Doped Conjugated Polymer Nanoparticles

Christina M. Davis; Elizabeth S. Childress; Elizabeth J. Harbron


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2005

Phototriggered fluorescence color changes in azobenzene-functionalized conjugated polymers.

Elizabeth J. Harbron; Diego A. Vicente; Deana H. Hadley; Matthew R. Imm


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2000

Probing Photoinduced Intersystem Crossing by Two-Color, Double Resonance Single Molecule Spectroscopy

Douglas S. English; Elizabeth J. Harbron; Paul F. Barbara


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2004

Fluorescence Modulation via Isomer-Dependent Energy Transfer in an Azobenzene-Functionalized Poly(phenylenevinylene) Derivative

Elizabeth J. Harbron; Diego A. Vicente; Mirth T. Hoyt


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2007

Photomodulated PPV emission in a photochromic polymer film

Steven M. Lewis and; Elizabeth J. Harbron

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Paul F. Barbara

University of Texas at Austin

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