Lite Version|Standard version

To gain access to this content please
Log in with your free Royal Society of Chemistry publishing personal account.
Log in via your home Institution.
Log in with your member or subscriber username and password.
Download

The triplet–triplet annihilation based up-conversion process, involving a platinum octaethyl-porphyrin (PtOEP) as a sensitizer and tetraphenyl-pyrene (TPPy) as an emitter, has been investigated in homogeneous solutions of toluene, bromobenzene and anisole, and oil-in-water microemulsions of the TX-100 surfactant, where toluene constitutes the non-polar phase. In homogeneous solutions, the highest up-conversion quantum yield (of the order of 20%) has been achieved in toluene, being the solvent that has the lowest viscosity among those explored. The up-conversion emission from the PtOEP–TPPy pair has been then investigated in a toluene based oil-in-water microemulsion at three different concentrations of the solutes, showing quantum yields up to the order of 1%, under the same irradiation conditions, but different deoxygenating procedures. The results herein reported might represent a good starting point for a future investigation in microheterogeneous systems. An optimization of the microemulsion composition, in terms of surfactant, co-surfactant and toluene concentrations, could allow us to increase the sensitizer and emitter concentrations and set up the best operative conditions to obtain even higher up-conversion efficiencies.

Graphical abstract: A triplet–triplet annihilation based up-conversion process investigated in homogeneous solutions and oil-in-water microemulsions of a surfactant

Page: ^ Top