Abstract

Entrapping of a fluorogenic material comprising prospective therapeutic activity in microhetrogeneous environments and modulating important photophysical properties is highly desirable as far as potential applications of such systems are concerned. The present work demonstrates the interesting photobehavior of a newly synthesized antioxidative naphthalimide (isoquinolinedione) derivative (ANAP) in micellar solutions of anionic sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS), cationic cetyl trimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and nonionic p-tert-octylphenoxy polyoxyethanol (TX-100) surfactants using steady-state, time-resolved fluorescence and fluorescence anisotropy techniques. The remarkable sensitivity of the fluorescence properties of ANAP to the polarity of the media is attributed to the existence of a fluorescent intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) state. ANAP is found to be an excellent fluorescence sensor for following the micellar aggregation process. Fluorometric studies suggest that the probe resides at the micelle–water interface in all these systems. The present effort endeavors the degree of accessibility of the fluorophore toward the metal ion quencher in the presence of micelles of different surface charge characteristics. The enhancements in the steady-state anisotropy and rotational relaxation time in the micellar media compared to that in pure aqueous solution reflect that the fluorophore resides in a motionally restricted environment introduced by the micelles.

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