L Dougan, J Crain, H Vass, and S W Magennis (2004)
Probing the liquid-state structure and dynamics of aqueous solutions by fluorescence spectroscopy
J. Fluorescence 14:91–97.
Time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy of the solvent- sensitive molecule 1,8-anilinonaphthalene sulfonate (ANS) is used to probe the structure and dynamics of an aqueous methanol solution (mole fraction = 0.5). The intensity decay of ANS in the mixed solvent displays single exponential kinetics under ambient conditions. At low temperature, a simple two-state solvent relaxation model describes the fluorescence decay for ANS in both methanol and the mixed solvent. The temperature dependence of ANS fluorescence in the mixed solvent is attributed to the onset of glassy dynamics in the aqueous component at higher temperature, implying a partial demixing of the water and methanol due to self-association. We discuss the absence of more complicated fluorescence decays in such a heterogeneous solvent system.