posted on 2013-06-12, 00:00authored byPeipei Guo, Penglei Chen, Minghua Liu
Surfactant-assisted self-assembly
(SAS) has received much attention
for supramolecular nanoassemblies, due to its simplicity and easiness
in realizing a controllable assembly. However, in most of the existing
SAS protocols, the employed surfactants work only as a regulator for
a controllable assembly but not as active species for function improvement.
In this paper, we report that a porphyrin, zinc 5,10,15,20-tetra(4-pyridyl)-21H,23H-porphine
(ZnTPyP), could be assembled to form one-dimensional (1D) supramolecular
nanostructures via a SAS method, wherein graphene oxide (GO) plays
a fascinating role of sheetlike surfactant. We show that, when a chloroform
or tetrahydrofuran solution of ZnTPyP is injected into an aqueous
dispersion of GO, 1D supramolecular nanoassemblies of ZnTPyP with
well-defined internal structures could be easily formulated in a controllable
manner. Our experimental facts disclose that the complexation of ZnTPyP
with the two-dimensional GO nanosheets plays an important role in
this new type of SAS. More interestingly, compared with the 1D ZnTPyP
nanoassemblies formulated via a conventional SAS, wherein cetyltrimethylammonium
bromide is used as surfactant, those constructed via our GO-assisted
SAS display distinctly enhanced photocatalytic activity for the photodegradation
of rhodamine B under visible-light irradiation. Our new findings suggest
that GO could work not only as an emergent sheetlike surfactant for
SAS in terms of supramolecular nanoassembly but also as functional
components during the performance of the assembled nanostructures.