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HERO ID
8261013
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Nondestructive monitoring of the photochromic state of dithienylethene monolayers by surface plasmon resonance
Author(s)
Masson, JF; Liddell, PA; Banerji, S; Battaglia, TM; Gust, D; Booksh, KS; ,
Year
2005
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Langmuir
ISSN:
0743-7463
EISSN:
1520-5827
Volume
21
Issue
16
Page Numbers
7413-7420
Language
English
PMID
16042473
DOI
10.1021/la0509899
Abstract
The use of surface plasmon resonance (SPR) as a nondestructive, nonerasing readout of the isomerization state of a photochromic dithienylethene covalently linked to a chemically modified gold surface was investigated. Four different binding layers were examined: 11-mercaptoundecanol (MUO), an amine-modified 11-mercaptoundecanol (MUO-NH2), dextran, and an amine-modified dextran. The binding of dithienylethene to the modified gold surface and photoisomerization of the photochrome in the bound state were established by FTIR. Solvent effects were measured for every layer tested using ethanol and hexanes. In general, large, easily measurable SPR signal changes could be detected under conditions where photoisomerization of the dithienylethene photochrome was not quenched by the gold plasmon, establishing SPR as a viable form of readout for potential dithienylethene-based optical data storage or processing devices. Dextran-bound photochrome in ethanol exhibited the largest SPR response upon photoisomerization, but is more prone to time-dependent fluctuations resulting from swelling of the dextran layer (caused by slow diffusion of the solvent) than the other layers. Large responses are also provided by MUO-NH2 and MUO, and the signal is much more stable than that for dextran.
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