2 research outputs found
One-Directional Antenna Systems: Energy Transfer from Monomers to J‑Aggregates within 1D Nanoporous Aluminophosphates
A cyanine
dye (PIC) was occluded into two 1D-nanopoporus Mg-containing
aluminophosphates with different pore size (MgAPO-5 and MgAPO-36 with
AFI and ATS zeolitic structure types, with cylindrical channels of
7.3 Å diameter and elliptical channels of 6.7 Å × 7.5
Å, respectively) by crystallization inclusion method. Different
J-aggregates are photophysically characterized as a consequence of
the different pore size of the MgAPO frameworks, with emission bands
at 565 nm and at 610 nm in MgAPO-5 and MgAPO-36, respectively. Computational
results indicate a more linear geometry of the J-aggregates inside
the nanochannels of the MgAPO-36 sample than those in MgAPO-5, which
is as a consequence of the more constrained environment in the former.
For the same reason, the fluorescence of the PIC monomers at 550 nm
is also activated within the MgAPO-36 channels. Owing to the strategic
distribution of the fluorescent PIC species in MgAPO-36 crystals (monomers
at one edge and J-aggregates with intriguing emission properties at
the other edge) an efficient and one-directional antenna system is
obtained. The unidirectional energy transfer process from monomers
to J-aggregates is demonstrated by remote excitation experiments along
tens of microns of distance