Insights into the Photophysics and Supramolecular Organization of Congo Red in Solution and the Solid State

Chemphyschem. 2017 Mar 3;18(5):564-575. doi: 10.1002/cphc.201601236. Epub 2017 Jan 26.

Abstract

Steady-state and time-resolved absorption and fluorescence measurements are reported for Congo Red (CR) in aqueous and dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) solutions. The very low fluorescence quantum yield (≈10-4 ) for CR in dilute solutions together with the absence of a triplet state indicates that internal conversion is the dominant deactivation route with more than 99.99 % of the quanta loss (attributed to the energy gap law for radiationless transitions). Although no direct evidence for trans-cis photoisomerization was obtained from absorption or fluorescence data, the global analysis of fs-transient absorption data indicates the presence of a photoproduct with a lifetime of ≈170 ps that is suggested to be associated with such a process. Spectral data for more concentrated CR solutions indicate the presence of oblique or twisted J-type aggregates. These results are compared with spectra for CR in the solid state (sodium salt) and intercalated in a layered double hydroxide via a one-step co-precipitation route. Powder XRD and electronic spectral data for the nanohybrid indicate that the CR guest molecules are intercalated as a monolayer consisting of slipped cofacial J-type aggregates.

Keywords: aggregation; congo red; intercalations; layered double hydroxides; photophysics.