Spectroscopic Investigations of Poly(Propyleneimine)Dendrimers Using the Solvatochromic Probe Phenol Blue and Comparisons to Poly(Amidoamine) Dendrimers

The physical and chemical properties of PPI dendrimers' interior were investigated using the fluorescent, solvatochromic probe phenol blue. In aqueous solutions of each generation studied, two discrete dye populations were clearly observed. PPI dendrimers were shown to form a tight, nonpolar as...

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Published inAnalytical chemistry (Washington) Vol. 73; no. 23; pp. 5743 - 5751
Main Authors Richter-Egger, Dana L, Tesfai, Aaron, Tucker, Sheryl A
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington, DC American Chemical Society 01.12.2001
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Summary:The physical and chemical properties of PPI dendrimers' interior were investigated using the fluorescent, solvatochromic probe phenol blue. In aqueous solutions of each generation studied, two discrete dye populations were clearly observed. PPI dendrimers were shown to form a tight, nonpolar association with the vast majority of available dye, within the dendrimer interior, near the core. In the steady-state fluorescence emission spectra, a microenvironment of decreasing polarity in increasingly larger-generation PPI dendrimers (up to G3) was seen for the associated probe. Each of the remaining larger-generation dendrimers provided a microenvironment of essentially equal polarity. Fluorescence anisotropy values for phenol blue in the PPI dendrimers demonstrated the dye's sensitivity to the changing molecular volumes of the dendrimer generations. Model compounds that mimicked PPI's surface groups and branching moieties were used to better define the associated dye's location. The mimics further confirmed that phenol blue was associated inside the dendrimer, where it did not interact with the dendrimer surface groups. The comparison of amine-terminated PPI and PAMAM dendrimers clearly demonstrated the effects of their structural differences and the ability of phenol blue to have sensed those differences, including the initiator core length, branching unit length, and branching unit chemical composition.
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content type line 23
ISSN:0003-2700
1520-6882
DOI:10.1021/ac0155355