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INTERACTIONS IN SINGLE WALL CARBON NANOTUBES/PYRENE/PORPHYRIN NANOHYBRIDS

Authors :
Demis Paolucci
Massimo Marcaccio
Francesco Zerbetto
Norbert Jux
Christian Ehli
Domenico Balbinot
Francesco Paolucci
Dirk M. Guldi
Maurizio Prato
Manuel Melle-Franco
Stéphane Campidelli
G. M. Aminur Rahman
Ehli C.
Rahman G. M. A.
Jux N.
Balbinot D.
Guldi D. M.
Paolucci F.
Marcaccio M.
Paolucci D.
Melle-Franco M.
Zerbetto F.
Campidelli S.
Prato M.
C., Ehli
G. M. A., Rahman
N., Jux
D., Balbinot
D. M., Guldi
F., Paolucci
M., Marcaccio
D., Paolucci
M., MELLE FRANCO
F., Zerbetto
S., Campidelli
Prato, Maurizio
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

This work provides an in-depth look at a range of physicochemical aspects of (i) single wall carbon nanotubes (SWNT), (ii) pyrene derivatives (pyrene(+)), (iii) porphyrin derivatives (ZnP(8)()(-)() and H(2)()P(8)()(-)()), (iv) poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate), and (v) their combinations. Implicit in their supramolecular combinations is the hierarchical integration of SWNT (as electron acceptors), together with ZnP(8)()(-)() or H(2)()P(8)()(-)() (as electron donors), in an aqueous environment mediated through pyrene(+). This supramolecular approach yields novel electron donor-acceptor nanohybrids (SWNT/pyrene(+)/ZnP(8)()(-)() or SWNT/pyrene(+)/H(2)()P(8)()(-)()). In particular, we report on electrochemical and photophysical investigations that as a whole suggest sizeable and appreciable interactions between the individual components. The key step to form SWNT/pyrene(+)()/ZnP(8)()(-)() or SWNT/pyrene(+)()/H(2)()P(8)()(-)() hybrids is pi-pi interactions between SWNT and pyrene(+), for which we have developed for the first time a sensitive marker. The marker is the monomeric pyrene fluorescence, which although quenched is (i) only present in SWNT/pyrene(+) and (ii) completely lacking in just pyrene(+). Electrostatic interactions help to immobilize ZnP(8)()(-)() or H(2)()P(8)()(-)() onto SWNT/pyrene(+) to yield the final electron donor-acceptor nanohybrids. A series of photochemical experiments confirm that long-lived radical ion pairs are formed as a product of a rapid excited-state deactivation of ZnP(8)()(-)() or H(2)()P(8)()(-)(). This formation is fully rationalized on the basis of the properties of the individual moieties. Additional modeling shows that the data are likely to be relevant to the SWNTs present in the sample, which possess wider diameters.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d5a57c65a6efe960253c4b3a22ca293d