Abstract
Spironaphthoxazine (SNO) and Zn2+ were intercalated into montmorillonite interlayers hydrophobically modified by the alkyltrimethylammonium cation during UV light irradiation. The fluorescence spectra of the montmorillonite composites were observed to vary with an increase in the UV and visible light irradiation times. These composites exhibited two types of fluorescence emissions: F1, which originates from a new species, Xs, which is different from SNO (ring-closed form) and merocyanine (MC; ring-open form), and F2, which originates from the MC-Zn complex. With increasing UV light irradiation time, the F1 intensities decreased, whereas the F2 intensities increased. Xs, which is an intermediate species between SNO and MC, was transformed into MC and then coordinated with Zn2+ (i.e., MC-Zn complex) during the UV light irradiation. The reaction rate of the formation of the MC-Zn complex decreased for the hydrophobically modified montmorillonite due to a longer alkyl chain. The retrieval changes in the F1 and F2 intensities were observed with an increasing visible light irradiation time, implying the dissociation of the MC-Zn complex into Xs and Zn2+. The dissociation especially occurred for the hydrophobically modified montmorillonite with a longer alkyl chain. The formation and disappearance of Xs and the MC-Zn complex obeyed first-order kinetics, and therefore the interconversion between Xs and MC could be regarded as the rate-determining step of the whole reaction during the UV and visible light irradiations. The photoinduced reactions of the SNO species and Zn2+ were profoundly affected by the physicochemical environment provided by the clay interlayers. It is concluded that the present photoreactions can be controlled not only by the amounts of the intercalated SNO species and Zn2+, but also by the hydrophobic environment created by the surfactant molecules.
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