Molecular encapsulation of anionic porphyrins in NH2-terminated polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimers and the interfacial behavior of the dendrimer-porphyrin associates were studied at the polarized water|1,2-dichloroethane (DCE) interface. The formation of the ion associates was significantly dependent on the pH condition and on the generation of dendrimers. 5,10,15,20-Tetrakis(4-sulfonatophenyl)porphyrin (ZnTPPS 4-) associated with the positively charged fourth generation (G4) PAMAM dendrimer was highly stabilized in the acidic aqueous solution without protolytic demetalation in a wide range of pH (pH > 2). In contrast to the zinc(II) complex, the free base porphyrin (H2TPPS 4-) was readily protonated under acidic conditions even in the presence of the dendrimers. In addition, the J-aggregates of diprotonated species, (H4TPPS 2-)n, were preferably formed on the dendrimer. The interfacial mechanism of the dendrimer-porphyrin associates was analyzed in detail by potential modulated fluorescence (PMF) spectroscopy. PMF results indicated that the dendrimers incorporating porphyrin molecules were transferred across the positively polarized water|DCE interface via adsorption step, whereas the transfer responses of the porphyrin ions released from the dendrimers were observed at negatively polarized conditions. A negative shift of the transfer potential of porphyrin ions compared to the intrinsic transfer potential was apparently observed for each ion association system. The ion association stability between the dendrimer and the porphyrin molecules could be estimated from a negative shift of the transfer potential. ZnTPPS 4-exhibited relatively strong interaction with the higher generation dendrimer, whereas H2TPPS 4-was less effectively associated with the dendrimers.3