4.7 Article

Photoinduced electron transfer in nanostructured assemblies of layered semiconducting oxide and methylviologen: Effect of the location of acceptor molecules

Journal

MICROPOROUS AND MESOPOROUS MATERIALS
Volume 123, Issue 1-3, Pages 280-288

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.micromeso.2009.04.011

Keywords

Intercalation: niobate; Methylviologen; Photoinduced electron transfer

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [20550171]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20550171] Funding Source: KAKEN

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We have synthesized nanostructured assemblies of layered hexaniobate, which is a semiconducting oxide possessing intercalating capability and photocatalytic activity, and a redox-active bipyridinium species (methylviologen, MV2+) by exfoliation-restacking and intercalation techniques. The exfoliated-restacked assembly was prepared through delamination of the niobate using triethanolammonium ions (TEAH(+)) as an exfoliating reagent and subsequent drop-cast of the exfoliated suspension. UV-irradiation of the niobate-MV2+ assemblies caused photoinduced electron transfer from the niobate layers to the MV2+ species to produce methylviologen radical cations (MV+.). The difference in the assembling technique yielded different MV+. species: dimers for the exfoliated-restacked assembly but monomers for the intercalation compound. XRD measurements showed a disordered layered structure of the exfoliated-restacked assembly, as evidenced by broad diffraction peaks. These observations suggest that the MV2+ ions are not strictly incorporated in the interlayer spaces of the niobate but present in a relatively mobile environment with weak binding to the oxide layers; this rationalizes the dimerization of the MV+. cations. On the other hand, ordered stacking of the intercalated assembly evidenced by sharp XRD peaks allows immobilization of the MV2+ cations in the interlayer spaces of the niobate. The disordered environment of the exfoliated-restacked assembly is ascribed to the hydration of the TEAH(+) ions introduced to the assembly as the exfoliating reagent. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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