4.6 Article

Effect of Acid on the Ultraviolet-Visible Absorption and Emission Properties of Curcumin

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 118, Issue 5, Pages 872-884

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp411686d

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Funding

  1. James-Franck German-Israeli Program in Laser-Matter Interaction
  2. Israel Science Foundation

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Steady-state and time-resolved emission techniques were employed to study the acid-base effects on the UV-vis spectrum of curcumin in several organic solvents. The fluorescence-decay rate of curcumin increases with increasing acid concentration in all of the solvents studied. In methanol and ethanol solutions containing about 1 M HCl, the short-wavelength fluorescence (lambda < 560 nm) decreases by more than an order of magnitude. (The peak fluorescence intensity of curcumin in these solvents is at 540 nm.) At longer wavelengths (lambda >= 560 nm) the fluorescence quenching is smaller by a factor of similar to 3. A new fluorescence band with a peak at about 620 nm appears at an acid concentration of about 0.2 M in both methanol and ethanol. The 620 nm/530 nm band intensity ratio increases with an increase in the acid concentration. In trifluoroethanol and also in acetic acid in the presence of formic acid, the steady-state emission of curcumin shows an emission band at 620 nm. We attribute this new emission band in hydrogen-bond-donating solvents to a protonated curcumin ROH2+ form. At high acid concentrations in acetic acid and in trifluoroethanol, the ground state of curcumin is also transformed to ROH2+ which absorbs at longer wavelengths with a band peak at similar to 530 nm compared to 420 nm in neutral-pH samples or 480 nm in basic solutions. In hydrogen-bond-accepting solvents such as dimethyl sulfoxide and also in methanol and ethanol, curcumin does not accept a proton to form the ground-state ROH2+

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