4.7 Article

Variety of steady and excited state interactions in BODIPY aggregates: Photophysics in antisolvent systems and floating layers

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR LIQUIDS
Volume 375, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.molliq.2023.121380

Keywords

Aggregate; BODIPY; Exciplex; Langmuir; Fluorescence

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The associative behavior of geometrically anisotropic meso-(4-octadecyloxy-phenyl)-boron-dipyrrin (BODIPY) was studied spectroscopically in binary solvent mixtures and upon compression in Langmuir floating layers. Different steady and excited state species were observed during monolayer compression and facilitated aggregation in water/acetonitrile systems. The findings highlight the need to consider system-specific factors when making generalizations about aggregating systems. Various decay fitting models were examined for the analysis of dye aggregates, with the radiative constant gamma-distribution approach and the maximum entropy method (MEM) showing superior performance for complex fluorescence decay analysis. MEM is recommended for systems with complicated lifetime distributions over time or under external stimuli. The findings and protocols can be used as tools for studying the photophysics of steady and excited-state BODIPY aggregates.
Associative behavior of geometrically anisotropic meso-(4-octadecyloxy-phenyl)-boron-dipyrrin (BODIPY) studied spectroscopically in binary solvent mixtures and upon compression in Langmuir floating layers. Different steady and excited state species were found upon monolayer compression and facilitated aggregation in water/ acetonitrile systems. This discrepancy points to a big concern in possibility of commonly applied generalizations across different aggregating systems. Broad range of decay fitting models were examined to reveal their benefits and pitfalls specific to examination of dye aggregates. Radiative constant gamma-distribution approach and free form fluorescence lifetime distribution with maximum entropy method (MEM) outperformed multiple common techniques for analysis of complex fluorescence decays. MEM could be recommended for analysis of systems where complicated lifetime distributions appear over time or upon external stimuli. Findings and protocols could be utilized as tools in studies of steady and excited-state photophysics of BODIPY aggregates. (c) 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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