AIEgens: An emerging fluorescent sensing tool to aid food safety and quality control

As a global public health problem, food safety has attracted increasing concern. To minimize the risk exposure of food to harmful ingredients, food quality and safety inspection that covers the whole process of “from farm to fork” is much desired. Fluorescent sensing is a promising and powerful scre...

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Veröffentlicht in:Comprehensive reviews in food science and food safety 2020-07, Vol.19 (4), p.2297-2329
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Xiaolin, Guo, Qian, Zhang, Ruoyao, Zhao, Zheng, Leng, Yuankui, Lam, Jacky W. Y., Xiong, Yonghua, Tang, Ben Zhong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:As a global public health problem, food safety has attracted increasing concern. To minimize the risk exposure of food to harmful ingredients, food quality and safety inspection that covers the whole process of “from farm to fork” is much desired. Fluorescent sensing is a promising and powerful screening tool for sensing hazardous substances in food and thus plays a crucial role in promoting food safety assurance. However, traditional fluorphores generally suffer the problem of aggregation‐caused quenching (ACQ) effect, which limit their application in food quality and safety inspection. In this regard, luminogens with aggregation‐induced emission property (AIEgens) showed large potential in food analysis since AIEgens effectively surmount the ACQ effect with much better detection sensitivity, accuracy, and robustness. In this contribution, we review the latest developments of food safety monitoring by AIEgens, which will focus on the molecular design of AIEgens and their sensing principles. Several examples of AIE‐based sensing applications for screening food contaminations are highlighted, and future perspectives and challenges in this emerging field are tentatively elaborated. We hope this review can motivate new research ideas and interest to aid food safety and quality control, and facilitate more collaborative endeavors to advance the state‐of‐the‐art sensing developments and reduce actual translational gap between laboratory research and industrial production.
ISSN:1541-4337
1541-4337
DOI:10.1111/1541-4337.12591