posted on 2015-12-01, 00:00authored byHitoshi Hosokawa, Tomoyuki Mochida
Solvatochromic
nickel(II) complexes with diketonato and diamine
ligands were incorporated into a saponite clay by ion exchange, and
their colorimetric humidity- and solvent-recognition properties were
investigated. These powders exhibit color change from red to blue-green
depending on humidity, and the detection range can be controlled by
modifying the metal complex. The humidity response takes advantage
of the humidity-dependent water content in clay and the coordination
of water molecules to the metal complex in equilibrium. The addition
of organic solvents to the powders causes a color change to occur,
varying from red to blue-green depending on the donor number of the
solvent, thereby enabling solvent recognition. In the clay, the affinity
of less sterically hindered complexes to water or solvent molecules
is decreased compared with that in solution because the cationic complexes
interact with the anionic layers in the clay. Incorporating diethylene
glycol into the materials produced thermochromic powders.