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Modification of the nanoscale structure of the J-aggregate of a sulfonate-substituted amphiphilic carbocyanine dye through incorporation of surface-active additives.

The amphiphilic dye 3,3'-bis(2-sulfopropyl)-5,5',6,6'-tetrachloro-1,1'-dioctylbenzimidacarbocyanine (C8S3) self-aggregates in aqueous solution to form tubular J-aggregates with a diameter of 17.0 +/- 0.5 nm, a wall thickness of approximately 4 nm, and a length exceeding several hundred nanometers. The absorption spectrum shows the typical features expected for tubular J-aggregates with several sharp and red-shifted absorption bands. Morphological investigations using cryo-transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) and spectroscopic investigations reveal a high stability of the tubular morphology but a tendency of the aggregates to assemble into ropelike bundles after several weeks of storage. It is found that aggregation in solutions containing additives such as alcohols or surfactants results in the formation of new types of aggregates. A second type of tubular aggregate with a diameter of 13.0 +/- 0.5 nm is observed when the solutions contain more than 10 wt % MeOH. On the time scale of days these tubular aggregates transform into ribbonlike structures characterized by a new absorption spectrum, and they convert after several weeks into giant tubes with diameters of up to 500 nm.

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