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Dual-Emissive Photoluminescent Langmuir-Blodgett Films of Decatungstoeuropate and an Amphiphilic Iridium Complex

Year: 2010

Journal: Langmuir (2010), 26(2), 1316-1324, 20121205

Authors: Clemente-Leon, Miguel; Coronado, Eugenio; Lopez-Munoz, Angel; Repetto, Diego; Ito, Takeru; Konya, Takayuki; Yamase, Toshihiro; Constable, Edwin C.; Housecroft, Catherine E.; Doyle, Kevin; et al

Organizations: Instituto de Ciencia Molecular, Universidad de Valencia, 46980 Paterna, Spain.

Langmuir monolayers and Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) films of the decatungstoeuropate [Eu(W(5)O(18))(2)](9-) (EuW(10)) and the amphiphilic Ir complex 1 have been successfully fabricated by using the adsorption properties of the EuW(10) polyanion dissolved in the aqueous subphase onto a positively charged 1 monolayer at the air-water interface. The compression isotherms and Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) of monolayers of 1 on pure water (1 monolayer) and on a subphase containing 10(-6) M EuW(10) and 10(-3) M NaCl (1/EuW(10) monolayer) have been studied. Infrared and UV-vis spectroscopy of the transferred LB films indicate that EuW(10) and 1 molecules are incorporated within these LB films. X-ray reflectivity (SXR) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) experiments indicate that LB films of 1 present a heterogeneous morphology while 1/EuW(10) films show a flatter and more homogeneous surface as well as a layered structure with a periodicity of 4.1 nm. Mixed monolayers of 1 and DODA (dimethyldioctadecylammonium bromide) have been prepared with EuW(10) polyanions in the subphase to control the concentration of 1 and EuW(10) polyanions within the LB films. AFM and SXR experiments with the transferred LB films show that the dilution of 1 with DODA improves the layered structure. The luminescence of 1 is partially quenched by EuW(10) in the 1/EuW(10) LB films, while emission from EuW(10) is not detected. On the other hand, emission from both entities is preserved in the LB films prepared from mixed DODA/1 monolayers, in which the red and yellow emissions arise independently from EuW(10) and 1, respectively. The different DODA:1 ratios lead to changes in the emission color. Therefore, they constitute a promising color-tunable luminescent material.