Abstract

AbstractThe quantum yield (ΦΔ) of singlet oxygen (O2(1Δg) production by 9H‐fluoren‐9‐one (FLU) is very sensitive to the nature of the solvent (0.02 in a highly polar and protic solvent, such as MeOH, to 1.0 in apolar solvents). This high sensitivity has been used for probing the interaction of FLU with micellar media and microemulsions based on anionic (sodium dodecyl sulfate, SDS; bis‐(2‐ethylhexyl)sodium sulfosuccinate, AOT), cationic (cetyltrimethylammonium chloride, CTAC) and nonionic (Triton X‐100, TX) surfactants. Values of ΦΔ of FLU vary in a wide range (0.05–1.0) in both microheterogeneous media and neat solvent, and provide information on the microenvironment of FLU, i.e., on its localization within organized media. In ionic and nonionic micellar media, as well as in four‐component microemulsions, FLU is, to various extents, exposed to solvation by the polar and protic components of the microheterogeneous systems (water and/or butan‐1‐ol) in the micellar interfacial region (ΦΔ=0.05–0.30). In contrast, in AOT reverse micelles (consisting of AOT as surfactant, cyclohexane as hydrophobic component, and water), FLU is located in the hydrophobic continuous pseudophase, and is totally separated from the micellar water pools (ΦΔ≈1.0).

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