Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.106, No.15, 3835-3841, 2002
1-and 2-photon fluorescence anisotropy decay in silicon alkoxide sol-gels: Interpretation in terms of self-assembled nanoparticles
We have studied the one- and two-photon induced fluorescence anisotropy decay of rhodamine 6G (R6G) during polymerization of tetramethyl orthosilicate (TMOS) approaching the sol-to-gel transition, a time denoted t(g), using time-correlated single-photon counting and femtosecond Ti:sapphire laser excitation. A biexponential decay of fluorescence anisotropy is observed at all times. We propose a different interpretation to the widely accepted view, that fluorescence anisotropy reports solely on molecular viscosity in sol-gels. We think our results are consistent with the presence of both free dye and dye bound to nm-size silica particles rather than just the coexistence of different discrete viscosity domains as reported previously. A corollary Of Our interpretation is that the microviscosity changes very little from that of the initial bulk sol throughout the sol-gel polymerization. Nanometer-size particles are known from small an-le scattering studies to be precursors to gelation in sol-gels over a wide range of conditions and our interpretation might prove to be an important step toward understanding the self-assembly mechanisms of silicon alkoxide based materials at the molecular level. According to our measurements and interpretation, for TMOS at pH 2.3 for example, primary silica particles of;: approximate to0.8-nm mean radius grow by monomer-monomer or monomer-cluster addition to produce larger structures approximate to 1.1-nm mean radius after one month.