Abstract

The confined aqueous medium of Triton X-100/cyclohexane-hexanol/water microemulsions was studied and compared with that of AOT/isooctane/water. The microenvironment generated was assessed by following the photophysical behaviour of the cationic dye, acridine orange (AO). This dye presents an acid-base equilibrium in free bulk water (pKa approximately equal to 10.2) which is clearly affected in Triton X-100 microemulsions where the neutral species is stabilised at low omega0. The addition of water contributes to the appearance of the protonated species. This, however, presents spectral features that show a less polar and/or protic character of the encapsulated water even at high contents. The "anomalous" microviscosity dependence on the amount of solubilised water (omega0 = [H2O]/[Surf]) in Triton X-100 microemulsions obtained from steady-state anisotropy data was used to discuss the existence of bulk free water within these confined media, where at omega0 = 8, properties seem to change. In AOT, a complex AO-AOT is detected in equilibrium with the protonated AO, at pH = 7. The two-state excited-state formalism was applied to describe the transient data which in the case of AOT introduces a rate constant that accounts for the water quenching (kq = 0.51 +/- 0.03 x 10(8) M(-1) cm(-1)).

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