Abstract

In recent years, the field of reverse micelles has witnessed a significant growth of interest, partly due to the finding that proteins, other biopolymers, and even bacterial cells can be solubilized in the reverse micellar systems. Among surfactants capable of forming water in oil microemulsion, the cationic surfactant cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) has received particular attention because of its ability to solubilize relatively large amount of water in a variety of hydrophobic organic solvents. Due to versatile photochemical and photophysical properties of Ru(II) complexes, Ru(II)- phenanthroline and its derivatives were used in this present work to form CTAB cationic reverse micelles and studied to characterise their photophysical properties such as absorption, emission and excited state life time. The findings from the spectral data observed in the present study proves that the excited state properties of Ru(II)-phenanthroline complexes are dramatically altered in the presence of reverse micelle. Specifically reverse micelle encapsulation of [Ru(dpphen)3]2+ complex in restricted environment causes blue shift in the emission maximum as well as have longer radiative lifetime. The blue shift in the emission maximum in the case of [Ru(dpphen)3]2+ indicates that the probes are near the water in oil reverse micellar interface, tightly bound and are not displaced towards the water pool of the micelle even at the highest water loading W0=50, which reveals the increased hydrophobicity. This highest fluorescence lifetime can serve as an excellent indicator to point out the location of the probe in a microheterogeneous system/environment.

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