4.8 Article

Water-Based Oxygen-Sensor Films

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 1, Issue 8, Pages 1785-1792

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am900306a

Keywords

Pressure-sensitive paints; barometry; iridium luminescence; quenching; oxygen-sensor films; luminescent polymers

Funding

  1. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. Discovery Grant
  3. Ontario Graduate Scholarships in Science and Technology (OGSST)

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The luminescent cyclometalated iridium complex [Ir(fppy)(2)(t-Bu-iCN)(2)]CF3SO3, 1 (fppy = 4-(2-pyridyl)benzaldehyde, and t-Bu-iCN = tert-butyl isocyanide), was synthesized and characterized by X-ray crystallography and H-1 NMR, absorption, and emission spectroscopies. Complex 1 was quantitatively bound to the water-soluble amine-functionalized polymer Silamine D208-EDA by reductive amination, to produce 2. The quantum yield of emission and excited state lifetime of 2 (phi(em) = 0.23 and tau = 20.6 mu s) are comparable to that of the model complex [Ir(tpy)(2)(t-Bu-iCN)(2)]CF3SO3, 3 (tpy = 2-(p- tolyl) pyridine) with phi(em) = 0.28 and tau = 35.6 mu s. Aqueous blends of 2 with Silamine and colloidal microcrystalline cellulose (MC) were used to prepare oxygen-sensor films. Oxygen sensitivities of these films were determined as a function of Silamine:MC ratio and obeyed Stern-Volmer kinetics. The Optimum oxygen-sensor Film composition was 2 in 1:1 Silamine:MC, which had an oxygen sensitivity of 0.502 over an atmospheric pressure range of 0.007-45 psi. Temperature sensitivity (percentage loss of intensity per degrees C) of this him was determined to be -1.1 and -1.4% degrees C-1 at vacuum and 1 bar atmospheric pressure, respectively. These results were compared to those of films incorporating dispersions of 1 and 3. Luminescence microscopy of 9:1, 1:1, and 1:5 Silamine:MC films of 2 show that the charged iridium complex in 2 associates with the surface of MC and lifetime measurements of these films show an increase in lifetime with increasing MC fraction. The optimum quenching sensitivity observed for the 1:1 Silamine:MC him suggests that the diffusion of oxygen must decrease with increasing fraction of MC and thereby decrease oxygen sensitivity. These novel materials offer an environmentally friendly alternative to the preparation of oxygen-sensor films.

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