Issue 9, 2004

Reversible aggregation, precipitation and re-dissolution of rhodamine 6G in aqueous sodium dodecyl sulfate

Abstract

Study of the interactions between a cationic laser-dye (rhodamine 6G or R6G) and an anionic surfactant (sodium dodecyl sulfate or SDS) in aqueous solution has demonstrated that the so-called premicellar effect on absorbance and fluorescence occurring in oppositely charged dye/surfactant systems is associated with a slow ion-pair aggregation/precipitation process. The red-shift and UV/visible band broadening which occurs during the precipitation process has been attributed to the formation of nanoparticles with size-dependent spectral properties. A slight increase of the SDS concentration (less than four-fold) gives rise to a slow re-dissolution of the previously precipitated particles. From the absorbance vs. time kinetic curves recorded during the aggregation/precipitation processes it can be deduced that a reaction-limited aggregation process dominates the early stages of the growth, while the end of the precipitation is diffusion-limited. Re-dissolution is also diffusion-limited. These findings have been interpreted by the formation and the re-dissolution of nanoparticles with possible fractal geometry. The whole process is likely to include several reversible steps. Among them, dimerization of the dye, ion-pairs and larger aggregates formation, precipitation of optically visible crystals, surfactant micellisation and re-dissolution of previously formed aggregates are the most prominent.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Sep 2003
Accepted
16 Feb 2004
First published
17 Mar 2004

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2004,6, 2420-2425

Reversible aggregation, precipitation and re-dissolution of rhodamine 6G in aqueous sodium dodecyl sulfate

J. C. Micheau, G. V. Zakharova and A. K. Chibisov, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2004, 6, 2420 DOI: 10.1039/B310946A

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