Study of Microheterogeneity in Acetonitrile-Water Binary Mixtures by using Polarity-Resolved Solvation Dynamics
The solvation dynamics of three coumarin dyes with widely varying polarities were studied in acetonitrile–water (ACN–H2O) mixtures across the entire composition range. At low ACN concentrations [ACN mole fractions (XACN)≤0.1], the solvation dynamics are fast (<40 ps), indicating a nearly homogene...
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Published in | Chemphyschem Vol. 16; no. 16; pp. 3518 - 3526 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Germany
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
16.11.2015
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | The solvation dynamics of three coumarin dyes with widely varying polarities were studied in acetonitrile–water (ACN–H2O) mixtures across the entire composition range. At low ACN concentrations [ACN mole fractions (XACN)≤0.1], the solvation dynamics are fast (<40 ps), indicating a nearly homogeneous environment. This fast region is followed by a sudden retardation of the average solvation time (230–1120 ps) at higher ACN concentrations (XACN≈0.2), thus indicating the onset of nonideality within the mixture that continues until XACN≈0.8. This nonideality regime (XACN≈0.2–0.8) comprises of multiple dye‐dependent anomalous regions. At very high ACN concentrations (XACN≈0.8–1), the ACN–H2O mixtures regain homogeneity, with faster solvation times. The source of the inherent nonideality of the ACN–H2O mixtures is a subject of debate. However, a careful examination of the widths of time‐resolved emission spectra shows that the origin of the slow dynamics may be due to the diffusion of polar solvent molecules into the first solvation shell of the excited coumarin dipole.
What a mix! The solvation dynamics of three coumarin dyes with various polarities were studied in acetonitrile–water (ACN–H2O) mixtures. Mixtures with ACN mole fractions between 0.2 and 0.8 show unexpectedly slow solvation times. The source of this nonideality is studied by time‐resolved emission spectroscopy and is revealed to be the diffusion of polar solvent molecules into the first solvation shell of the excited coumarin dipole. |
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Bibliography: | DST ark:/67375/WNG-28RSQK3G-8 Ramanujan fellowship - No. SR/S2/RJN-36/2012 istex:ACCEF30E085240C02970C845A78F10D1AE8B05A4 ArticleID:CPHC201500663 ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 1439-4235 1439-7641 1439-7641 |
DOI: | 10.1002/cphc.201500663 |