Abstract

It is shown that fluorescence anisotropy from lipidlike probes in the hexagonal HII phase gives information of (a) orientational order parameters, (b) the wobbling diffusion constant, and (c) the hopping diffusion constant of the probe, DH, equals DL/R2, the lateral diffusion constant over the square of the radius of the hexagonal tubes. Here we consider only lipidlike probes having the absorption transition movement and/or the emission transition moment along the long axis of the molecule. Three models are introduced for analysis of time-resolved data: the "WOBHOP," the "reduced WOBHOP," and the "P2P4HOP" model. The fluorescence anisotropy in response to a very short excitation pulse in each of the three models is a constant plus a number of exponentials. The WOBHOP and reduced WOBHOP models have 3 and 2 exponentials, respectively, and both contain four fitting parameters: r0 (the fundamental anisotropy), (P2) (the second rank orientational order parameter), DW (the wobbling diffusion constant), and DH (the hopping diffusion constant). The P2P4HOP model has eight exponentials and five fitting parameters: the four parameters listed above and (P4) (the fourth rank orientational order parameter). Analysis of fluorescence anisotropy data in the hexagonal HII phase using one of these models allows for obtaining the hopping diffusion constant, and, if the lateral diffusion constant is known, the radius of the hexagonal tubes. Substitution of DH = 0 in each of the three models yields an expression for the fluorescence anisotropy that is used in the literature for lamellar (L alpha or L beta) phases. The fluorescence anisotropy in coexisting L alpha/HII phases is discussed.

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