“…Table 3 presents the results of the mean fluorescence lifetimes of DFO for different concentrations of the dye in the TiO 2 matrix. Shortening of fluorescence lifetime with the increase in the dye concentration evidences the significant presence of aggregates, which can play a double role in the system: firstly, aggregates can act as perfect or imperfect traps for excitation energy transferred from monomers [ 2 , 12 , 34 , 35 , 36 , 37 , 38 , 39 ] and, secondly, the aggregates at highest concentrations are likely to contribute to the fluorescence signal emitting short living fluorescence. A similar behavior has been previously observed and analyzed for several other dyes such as rhodamines and carbocyanines in polymers and hybrid matrices with the only difference that, in this work, the fluorescence spectral shift was found more pronounced, making those analyses more straightforward [ 4 , 39 ].…”