Effect of processing conditions on the formation of aggregates and phase domains in monolayers of the hemicyanine dye, 4-(4-(dihexadecylamino)styryl)-N-methylpyridinium iodide
Al. Lusk et Pw. Bohn, Effect of processing conditions on the formation of aggregates and phase domains in monolayers of the hemicyanine dye, 4-(4-(dihexadecylamino)styryl)-N-methylpyridinium iodide, J PHYS CH B, 105(2), 2001, pp. 462-470
Epifluorescence microscopy and tapping mode AFM measurements were used to s
tudy the morphology of Lanmuir-Blodgett monolayers of the hemicyanine dye,
4-(4-(dihexadecylamino)styryl)-N-methylpyridinium iodide, I, prepared under
conditions of varying spreading solution concentration, compression speed,
aging, subphase composition, and deposition pressure. The morphology, whic
h is the result of coexisting liquid-expanded (LE) and liquid-condensed (LC
) phases, is very sensitive to film preparation conditions but relatively i
nsensitive to deposition pressure for a given film preparation protocol. Em
ission images reveal the following: domain size and shape are unaffected by
deposition pressure; increasing spreading solution concentration while mai
ntaining a constant number of molecules on the surface results in increased
domain size; emission from the LC domains is more highly variegated as com
pression speed increases; and incorporation of I- in the subphase results i
n an entirely new morphology, in contrast to Cl- which only reduces domain
size slightly. Far-field fluorescence from films of I is nearly constant as
a function of pressure, indicating that aggregation occurs long before the
compression process, perhaps even persisting from the spreading solution.
This suggests that for monolayers of I, unlike monolayers of fatty acids, b
oth aggregates and phase domains are seeded early in the Langmuir process.
This is corroborated by the observation of aggregate formation at the air-w
ater interface before compression takes place, a third phase was also obser
ved and shown to be tens of monolayers in thickness and ca. 1 mum in latera
l, size by atomic force microscopy. This phase is likely associated with lo
cal film collapse and the presence of small bright regions in the epifluore
scence images.