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    Contrasting Behavior of Classical Salts versus Ionic Liquids toward Aqueous Phase J-Aggregate Dissociation of a Cyanine Dye

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    The effect of addition of ionic liquids (ILs) on the aggregation behavior of a cyanine dye, 5,5′,6,6′-tetrachloro-1,1′-diethyl-3,3′-di(4-sulfobutyl)-benzimidazolocarbocyanine (TDBC), was investigated. In basic aqueous buffer solutions (pH ≥ 10), TDBC preferably exists in its J-aggregated form. Addition of hydrophilic ILs > 5 wt % is observed to disrupt the TDBC J-aggregates, converting them to monomer form most likely because of the interaction between bulky IL cation and the J-aggregates in a time-dependent fashion. This is evidenced by the observed increase in monomer band absorbance at the expense of the absorbance band due to J-aggregates over time. Inorganic salts at similar molar concentrations do not cause this phenomenon but instead induce TDBC precipitation. At low concentrations (<5 wt %), the added IL acts similarly to the inorganic salts, reducing the overall absorbance of TDBC in the solution most likely due to cation exchange causing TDBC precipitation. Addition of a molecular solvent, ethanol, at 15 wt % results in an initial increase in monomer absorbance, albeit to a much lesser extent than for the corresponding molar fraction of IL, which then decreases over time with recovery of J-aggregate absorbancequite opposite the time-dependent behavior seen for TDBC in PB at pH 12.0 with >5 wt % IL. The unique and dual behavior of ILs as an additive toward affecting cyanine dye aggregation is demonstrated
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