Due to the relevance to excited-state processes, sensing mechanisms of fluorescent probes were difficult to study directly by experimental methods. This work investigated theoretically the sensing mechanism of a reported bifunctional fluorescent probe to detect intracellular hydroxyl radicals and their environmental viscosity (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2019, 141, 18301). Calculations were performed at the B3P86/TZVP/SMD level using density functional theory and time-dependent density functional theory. The transition from the ground-state (S) to the first singlet excited state (S) was calculated to have the largest oscillation strength for the probe. The wavelength that corresponded to the S-S vertical excitation energy (427 nm) agreed well with the maximum absorption band at 400 nm in the ultraviolet-visible spectra. Theoretical results showed that the probe had two distinct geometries in the S and S states, respectively. This difference was caused by the different distributions of frontier molecular orbitals that were involved in the S-S transition and corresponds to a twisted intramolecular charge transfer. The S-state potential energy curve of the probe molecule confirmed that the twisted intramolecular charge transfer could proceed spontaneously with a potential barrier of only 12.20 kJ/mol. This result provided an irradiative approach for the probe molecule to dissipate the S-state energy, which explained its fluorescence quenching. In contrast, the hydroxyl oxidation reaction changed frontier molecular orbitals of the probe molecule, which made its S state a local S state with a strong fluorescence emission. Precisely due to the mechanism, the hydroxyl radicals could be detected by changes in the fluorescence signal of the probe molecule.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.saa.2021.119928DOI Listing

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