Self-location of acceptors as "isolated" or "stacked" energy traps in a supramolecular donor self-assembly: a strategy to wavelength tunable FRET emission

Ajayaghosh, Ayyappanpillai ; Vijayakumar, Chakkooth ; Praveen, Vakayil K. ; Santhosh Babu, S. ; Varghese, Reji (2006) Self-location of acceptors as "isolated" or "stacked" energy traps in a supramolecular donor self-assembly: a strategy to wavelength tunable FRET emission Journal of the American Chemical Society, 128 (22). pp. 7174-7175. ISSN 0002-7863

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Official URL: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja0621905

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja0621905

Abstract

Control over supramolecular assemblies of donor and acceptor arrays in nanoscale dimension that facilitate efficient energy transfer resulting in tunable emission is an outstanding challenge. In pursuit of this goal, we have designed a supramolecular donor-acceptor organogel with tunable emission from green to red through controlled energy transfer by simply varying the acceptor concentration. Temperature-dependent UV/vis absorption, XRD, and AFM studies of the coassembly of 1 (donor) and 2 (acceptor) revealed the intercalation of 2 within the self-assembly of 1. Upon excitation of the decane gels of 1 with 0-2 mol % of 2, quenching of the emission of the former at 509 nm with the formation of the monomer emission of the latter at 555 nm is observed. Upon further addition of 2 (2-20 mol %), the emission was continuously red-shifted to 610 nm, which corresponds to the aggregate emission of 2. Consequently, a 98% quenching of the donor emission was observed at 509 nm. Fluorescence microscopic studies provided visual evidence for the color tuning of the FRET emission. Thus efficient trapping of excitons by "isolated" or "aggregated" acceptors through a subtle control of the self-assembly and the photophysical properties of the donor-acceptor building blocks allowed a continuous shifting of the emission color anywhere between green and red (λmax, 509-610 nm) in a supramolecular light harvesting system.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Chemical Society.
ID Code:372
Deposited On:21 Sep 2010 04:44
Last Modified:31 Dec 2010 10:36

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