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Research Article

ScienceAsia 32 (2006): 261-269 |doi: 10.2306/scienceasia1513-1874.2006.32.261

Surface-Enhanced Infrared Spectra of Manganese (III) Tetraphenylporphine Chloride Physisorbed on Gold Island Films


Jitraporn Vongsvivut,a,b* Tamitake Itoh,a Akifumi Ikehata,a Sanong Ekgasit,b and Yukihiro Ozakia

 
ABSTRACT: Surface-enhanced infrared absorption (SEIRA) spectra of manganese (III) tetraphenylporphine chloride (Mn(TPP)Cl) on metal island films were measured in transmission mode. Dependences of the enhancement factor of SEIRA on both the sample quantity and the type of evaporated metal were investigated by subsequently increasing the amount of Mn(TPP)Cl on gold and silver substrates. The enhancement increases nonlinearly with the amount of sample and varies slightly with the thickness of metal islands. In particular, the SEIRA transmission method presents an anomalous spectral enhancement by a factor of 579, with substantial spectral shifts, observed only for the physisorbed Mn(TPP)Cl that remained on a 3-nm-thick gold film after immersion of the substrates into acetone. A charge-transfer (CT) interaction between the porphyrinic Mn and gold islands is therefore proposed as an additional factor in the SEIRA mechanism of the porphyrin system. The number of remaining porphyrin molecules was estimated by calibration-based fluorescence spectroscopy to be 2.36 x 1013 molecules (i.e., about 2.910-11 mol/cm2) for a 3-nm-thick gold film, suggesting that the physisorbed molecules distributed very loosely on the metal island surface as a result of the weak van der Waals interactions. Fluorescence microscopy revealed the formation of microcrystalline porphyrin aggregates during the consecutive increase in sample solution. However, the immersion likely redistributed the porphyrin to be directly attached on the gold surface, as evidenced by an absence of porphyrinic microcrystals and the observed SEIRA enhancement. The distinctive red shift in the UV-visible spectra and the SEIRA-enhanced peaks indicate the presence of a preferred orientation in the form of the porphyrin ring inclined with respect to the gold surface.

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a Department of Chemistry, School of Science and Technology, Kwansei-Gakuin University, Gakuen, Sanda 669-1337, Japan.
b Sensor Research Unit (SRU), Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 10330, Thailand.

* Corresponding author, E-mail: JitrapornV@hotmail.com

Received 6 Sep 2005, Accepted 15 Feb 2006