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Featured researches published by Xingmao Chang.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Functionality-Oriented Derivatization of Naphthalene Diimide: A Molecular Gel Strategy-Based Fluorescent Film for Aniline Vapor Detection

Jiayun Fan; Xingmao Chang; Meixia He; Congdi Shang; Gang Wang; Shiwei Yin; Haonan Peng; Yu Fang

Modification of naphthalene diimide (NDI) resulted in a photochemically stable, fluorescent 3,4,5-tris(dodecyloxy)benzamide derivative of NDI (TDBNDI), and introduction of the long alkyl chains endowed the compound with good compatibility with commonly found organic solvents and in particular superior self-assembly in the solution state. Further studies revealed that TDBNDI forms gels with nine of the 18 solvents tested at a concentration of 2.0% (w/v), and the critical gelation concentrations of five of the eight gels are lower than 1.0% (w/v), indicating the high efficiency of the compound as a low-molecular mass gelator (LMMG). Transmission electron microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and confocal laser scanning microscopy studies revealed the networked fibrillar structure of the TDBNDI/methylcyclohexane (MCH) gel. On the basis of these findings, a fluorescent film was developed via simple spin-coating of the TDBNDI/MCH gel on a glass substrate surface. Fluorescence behavior and sensing performance studies demonstrated that this film is photochemically stable, and sensitive and selective to the presence of aniline vapor. Notably, the response is instantaneous, and the sensing process is fully and quickly reversible. This case study demonstrates that derivatization of photochemically stable fluorophores into LMMGs is a good strategy for developing high-performance fluorescent sensing films.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Formation of An Ionic PTCA-β-CDNH2 Complex and Its Application for Phenol Sensing in Aqueous Phase

Lingling Liu; Xiangli Chen; Kaiqiang Liu; Meixia He; Gang Wang; Xingmao Chang; Yu Fang

On the basis of proton transfer in aqueous phase, we prepared a water-soluble and highly fluorescent ionic complex of 3,4,9,10-perylene tetracarboxylic acid (PTCA) and 6-deoxy-6-amino-β-CD (β-CDNH2) and studied its fluorescence behavior. It was found that the fluorescence emission of the complex is sensitive and selective to the presence of trace amount of toxic phenolic compounds, in particular phenol, which is crucial for water quality control. The detection limit (DL) of the method to the analyte is ~0.03 μM, a lowest value reported in literatures for similar techniques. Interestingly, the detection at an unprecedented subnanogram (DL, ~0.12 ng/cm(2)) level can also be conducted in a visualized manner, which may provide a simple and low-cost protocol for on-site and real-time detection of the analyte. Moreover, the complex is humidity sensitive in dry state, and its color changes from bright yellow to bright green when exposed to wet vapor. Unlike other PTCA bisimide derivatives, preparation of the ionic complex of PTCA/β-CDNH2 is simple and avoids complicated synthetic burden. Furthermore, introduction of methanol into the aqueous solution of the complex resulted in aggregation as indicated by solution color change and proved by transmission electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering studies, which explains why the compound in dry state is sensitive to the presence of water and water vapor. X-ray diffraction, UV-vis, and fluorescence studies uncovered the H-packing nature of the structure of the aggregate.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Dynamic Covalent Chemistry-based Sensing: Pyrenyl Derivatives of Phenylboronic Acid for Saccharide and Formaldehyde.

Xingmao Chang; Jiayun Fan; Min Wang; Zhaolong Wang; Haonan Peng; Gang He; Yu Fang

We synthesized two specially designed pyrenyl (Py) derivatives of phenylboronic acid, PSNB1 and PSNB2, of which PSNB2 self-assemble to form dynamic aggregate in methanol-water mixture (1:99, v/v) via intermolecular H-bonding and pi-pi stacking. Interestingly, the dynamic aggregate shows smart response to presence of fructose (F) as evidenced by fluorescence color change from green to blue. More interestingly, the fluorescence emission of the resulted PSNB2-F changes from blue to green with the addition of formaldehyde (FA). The reason behind is formation of a PSNB2-F dimer via FA cross-linking. Based upon the reactions as found, sensitive and fast sensing of F and FA in water was realized, of which the experimental DLs could be significantly lower than 10 μM for both analytes, and the response times are less than 1 min. It is believed that not only the materials as created may have the potential to find real-life applications but also the strategy as developed can be adopted to develop other dynamic materials.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Creation of reduced graphene oxide based field effect transistors and their utilization in the detection and discrimination of nucleoside triphosphates.

Chunmeng Yu; Xingmao Chang; Jing Liu; Liping Ding; Junxia Peng; Yu Fang

Two low-cost, micropatterned, solution-gated field effect transistors (modified FET and unmodified FET) based on reduced graphene oxide (RGO) were developed and used for detection and discrimination of nucleoside triphosphates (NTPs). The modified FET was realized by simple deposition of a positively charged bis-pyrenyl derivative, py-diIM-py, onto the conducting RGO strips of the unmodified FET. The electrical properties and sensing behaviors of the as-prepared devices were studied comprehensively. Electrical transfer property tests revealed that both of the two FETs exhibit V-shaped ambipolar field effect behavior from p-type region to n-type region. Sensing performance studies demonstrated that modification of the native FET with py-diIM-py improves its sensing ability to NTPs-GTP and ATP in particular. The detection limit of GTP and ATP was as low as 400 nM, which is the lowest value for graphene-based electronic sensors reported so far. Furthermore, based on the cross-reactive responses of the two devices to NTPs, NTPs can be conveniently distinguished via combining use of the two devices. The enhancement of the modifier (py-diIM-py) to the sensing performance of the FET is tentatively attributed to its possible mediation role in sticking onto RGO strips and accumulating analytes by electrostatic association with the relevant species. Because they are sensitive and fast in response, simple and low-cost in preparation, and possibly useful in sensor-array fabrication, the developed sensors show great potential in real-life application.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

New solvatochromic probes: performance enhancement via regulation of excited state structures

Huijing Liu; Xiaojie Xu; Haonan Peng; Xingmao Chang; Xuwei Fu; Qianshu Li; Shiwei Yin; G. J. Blanchard; Yu Fang

A new fluorescent conjugate (PNBD) with a structure of D-π-A was designed and synthesized, where the donor (D), the acceptor (A) and the bridge (π) are naphthalyl, dicyanovinyl and phenylethynyl-phenylethynyl, respectively. To improve the solubility of the conjugate, two long alkyl chains were introduced as substituents of the central aromatic ring. Spectroscopic studies demonstrated that PNBD is a strongly solvatochromic probe which is characterized by a large molar absorption coefficient (>32 000 cm-1 M-1), long wavelength absorption (>410 nm), large solvatochromic emission range (470-650 nm), high photochemical stability, and good solubility in common organic solvents. The fluorescent quantum yield of PNBD is limited in some polar solvents due to dual emission, a phenomenon ascribed to radiative decay from a higher excited singlet state. To eliminate dual emission, a covalently bound dimer (BPNBD) of PNBD characterized by weak vibronic coupling, was designed and synthesized. The dimer constituents are linked by a single bond between the naphthalyl moieties of the two PNBD monomers. As expected, BPNBD maintains almost all the strong points of the monomer, exhibits a substantial increase in fluorescence quantum yield, and eliminates dual emission by facilitating efficient internal conversion. Importantly, the use of PNBD and BPNBD in concert provides unprecedented discrimination among solvents of similar structures, such as (CH2Cl2, CHCl3, CCl4), (ethyl ether, THF, dioxane), or (methanol, ethanol, n-propanol, n-butanol, n-pentanol, n-hexanol, n-heptanol, n-octanol, n-decanol), allowing rapid and selective visual identification.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

Constitutional Dynamic Chemistry-based New Concept of Molecular Beacons for High Efficient Development of Fluorescent Probes

Xingmao Chang; Chunmeng Yu; Gang Wang; Jiayun Fan; Jianyun Zhang; Yanyu Qi; Kaiqiang Liu; Yu Fang

Inspired by the concept of constitutional dynamic chemistry, we propose a new and well-adaptable strategy for developing molecular beacon (MB)-like fluorescent probes. To demonstrate the strategy, we synthesized and used an amino group containing pyrenyl derivative of cholesterol (CP) for the construction of new fluorescent probes with EDTA and sulfuric acid. The probes as created were successfully used for n-hexane purity checking and Ba(2+)and Pb(2+)sensing, respectively.


Analytical Chemistry | 2017

Dynamic Chemistry-Based Sensing: A Molecular System for Detection of Saccharide, Formaldehyde, and the Silver Ion

Xingmao Chang; Zhaolong Wang; Yanyu Qi; Rui Kang; Xinwen Cui; Congdi Shang; Kaiqiang Liu; Yu Fang

Development of artificial complex molecular systems is of great importance in understanding complexity in natural processes and for achieving new functionalities. One of the strategies is to create them via optimized utilization of noncovalent interactions and dynamic covalent bonds. We report here on a new complex molecular system, which was constructed by integrating the multiple interactions containing a dynamic covalent interaction between 1,2-diol and boronic acid, a coordination interaction between the silver ion and pyridyl, and an easy accessible reaction between secondary amine and formaldehyde. By employing the three dynamic interactions, a pyrene (Py) labeled fluorophore, PPB, was designed and synthesized. The compound reacts with fructose (F), a monosaccharide, in aqueous phase and produces a fluorescent adduct, PPB-F, which can be further used as a sensing platform for formaldehyde (FA) and the silver ion. The respective dynamic interactions are accompanied with color changes due to the reversible switching between Py-monomer emission and excimer emission. The respective experimental detection limits (DLs) for the three analytes are much lower than 0.2 mM, 0.1 mM, and 2.5 μM, respectively. The presence of relevant compounds or ions shows little effect upon the sensing. No doubt, the results as presented show that the integration of supramolecular interactions including dynamic covalent bonds can be employed as a general strategy to develop new functional molecular systems or materials.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018

Highly Sensitive and Discriminative Detection of BTEX in the Vapor Phase: A Film-Based Fluorescent Approach

Zhaolong Wang; Ke Liu; Xingmao Chang; Yanyu Qi; Congdi Shang; Taihong Liu; Jing Liu; Liping Ding; Yu Fang

BTEX (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, o-xylene, m-xylene, and p-xylene) represents a group of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and constitutes a great threat to human health. However, sensitive, selective, and speedy detection of them on-site and in the vapor phase remains a challenge for years. Herein, we report a film-based fluorescent approach and a conceptual sensor, which shows unprecedented sensitivity, speed, and reversibility to the aromatic hydrocarbons in the vapor phase. In the studies, pentiptycene was employed to produce a nonplanar perylene bisimide (PBI) derivative, P-PBI. The compound was further utilized to fabricate the film. The novelty of the design is the combination of capillary condensation and solvent effect, which is expected to enrich the analytes from vapor phase and shows outputs at the same time. Importantly, the film permits instant response (∼3 s) and real-time identification (<1 min) of benzene and toluene from other aromatic hydrocarbons. The experimental detection limits (DLs) of the six analytes are lower than 9.2, 2.7, 1.9, 0.2, 0.4, and 0.4 ppm, which with the exception of benzene, are significantly lower than the NIOSH recommended long-term exposure limits. More importantly, the film is photochemically stable, and more than 300 repetitive tests showed no observable bleaching. In addition, the sensing is fully reversible. The superior performance of the film device is in support of the assumption that the combination of capillary condensation and solvation effect would constitute an effective way to design high-performance fluorescent films, especially for challenging chemical inert and photoelectronically inactive VOCs.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

A butterfly-shaped pyrene derivative of cholesterol and its uses as a fluorescent probe.

Keru Zhao; Taihong Liu; Gang Wang; Xingmao Chang; Dong Xue; Kevin D. Belfield; Yu Fang


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2015

Towards a new FRET system via combination of pyrene and perylene bisimide: synthesis, self-assembly and fluorescence behavior

Gang Wang; Xingmao Chang; Junxia Peng; Kaiqiang Liu; Keru Zhao; Chunmeng Yu; Yu Fang

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Yu Fang

Shaanxi Normal University

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Gang Wang

Shaanxi Normal University

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Congdi Shang

Shaanxi Normal University

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Kaiqiang Liu

Shaanxi Normal University

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Haonan Peng

Shaanxi Normal University

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Meixia He

Shaanxi Normal University

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Yanyu Qi

Shaanxi Normal University

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Chunmeng Yu

Shaanxi Normal University

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Jiayun Fan

Shaanxi Normal University

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Rui Kang

Shaanxi Normal University

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