4.5 Article

Optical spectroscopy of inorganic-organic host-guest nanocrystals organized as oriented monolayers

Journal

INORGANICA CHIMICA ACTA
Volume 360, Issue 3, Pages 869-875

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.ica.2006.06.008

Keywords

zeolites; host-guest systems; supramolecular chemistry; monolayers; optical polarization measurements; energy transfer; FRET

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Oriented and densely packed zeolite L monolayers were prepared on a glass support. The one-dimensional channels of zeolite L, being all oriented perpendicular to the glass and parallel to each other, were sequentially filled by ion exchange with two strongly fluorescent dye molecules. First N-methylacridine (MeAcr(+)) was inserted followed by 3,3'-diethylthiacarbocyanine (DTC+). The shorter MeAcr(+) is oriented perpendicular to the channel axis while the longer DTC+ is parallel, due to the constraints imposed by the geometry of the zeolite L channels, as deduced from fluorescence anisotropy of single MeAcr(+)-zeolite L and DTC+-zeolite L crystals. The dye molecules can enter the channels only from the top side of the monolayer, since the entrances on the bottom are blocked by the glass support. The resulting ordering has been observed by fluorescence microscopy of single DTC+, MeAcr(+)-zeolite L crystals. Conditions were found to suppress the pronounced Rayleigh scattering of zeolite monolayers. Thus high quality absorption spectra of DTC+, MeAcr(+)-zeolite L monolayers on glass could be measured at different angles between the incident light and the layer. The results deliver a direct proof that microscopic ordering of the dyes in the channels of zeolite L as well as macroscopic organization of the dye-zeolite L monolayer on the glass support was achieved. Thus a high level of organization was obtained by controlled assembly of the zeolite L crystals into oriented structures followed by subsequent insertion of strongly luminescent dyes. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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