Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.110, No.19, 9452-9460, 2006
Hemicyanine dye as a surfactant for the synthesis of bicontinuous cubic mesostructured silica
In this paper, we developed a facile way to synthesize highly ordered optically active MCM-48 at room temperature, by using mixtures of hemicyanine dye N-alkyl-2-[p-(N,N-diethylamino)-o-(alkyloxy)] pyridinium bromide ( denoted as o-CnPOCm, Scheme 1) and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide ( CTAB) as the structure-directing agents. The mesoporous materials were systematically characterized by powder X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, nitrogen sorption, and thermogravimetry. The resultant MCM-48 exibits unusually high thermal stability. For example, in the case of o-C2POC14, it can retain its cubic structure even under calcinations at 900 degrees C for 5 h, although the pore size is shifted to the micropore region because of shrinkage of the framework. The typical surface area and pore volume are 980 m(2)/g and 0.44 cm(3)/g, respectively, for the powder calcined under such a high temperature. This is the first report of room-temperature synthesis of MCM-48 with such good thermal stability using cationic-cationic mixed surfactant as the structure-directing agent. The fluorescence lifetimes of the as-synthesized mesostructured MCM-48 were also measured, and the result showed that the incorporated dye molecules have a 1 order of magnitude longer lifetime than that of free species in solution, showing that the hemicyanine dye molecules are well dispersed within the CTAB surfactant matrix. Furthermore, we compared eight other dye congeners ( Scheme 1) to fully investigate the mesophase resulting from the dye-CTAB system. The results show that, upon addition of the dye surfactant to the starting mixtures, the mesostructured silica undergoes an intrinsic phase-transition process; however, specific dye geometry is required to obtain MCM-48 at room temperature. Those functionalities as well as the designed synthesis of this novel mesostructured MCM-48 material promise a bright future in multifunctional optical and electric nano- and microdevices (e.g., waveguides, laser, light-emitting diodes, etc.) and also shed light on the self-assembly behavior in complex colloidal system.