Vanadate has become an important indicator for environmental testing due to its high toxicity, mobility, and difficulty in degradation. In addition, depending on its dynamic aggregation, analyzing vanadate is not a single content test; it needs further morphological analysis. Previous research has tended to construct a single functional platform with complicated procedures and expensive equipment, making it difficult to obtain a comprehensive picture of vanadate in a short time. Herein, we constructed a dual-response fluorescent probe EuTAT@Rh B formed by Eu, 2-aminoterephthalic acid (TAT), and rhodamine B, which could generate structural changes based on the morphology distribution characteristics of vanadate with pH. In the concentration range from 5 × 10 to 2 × 10 mol/L, the detection limits (3σ/slope, σ = /) of orthovanadate VO and metavanadate VO were 1.67 × 10 and 2.0 × 10 mol/L, respectively. In addition, under 254 nm UV light, the spirolactam ring-controlled structures varied with pH and vanadate concentration, producing different types of photochromic structures, which were able to correspond essentially to the pH range of vanadate morphology distribution. Thus, a window with both vanadate and pH signals was constructed under the dual channels of UV and fluorescence, and we successfully achieved the visual integrated analysis of vanadate. This dual-channel visualization method has the advantages of simplifying the analysis process and improving the detection efficiency, which is of great significance in practical applications and provides a way to identify other polymeric substances.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.4c01505DOI Listing

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