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Topic: Excitation vs absorption spectra  (Read 1144 times)

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Offline blackcat

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Excitation vs absorption spectra
« on: September 24, 2019, 05:44:24 PM »
For organic molecules, what are the possible reasons when excitation and absorption spectra have different shapes???

Offline Corribus

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Re: Excitation vs absorption spectra
« Reply #1 on: September 24, 2019, 07:28:23 PM »
There are lots of reasons. Is this an academic question or something particular?
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Offline blackcat

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Re: Excitation vs absorption spectra
« Reply #2 on: September 24, 2019, 09:23:31 PM »
There are lots of reasons. Is this an academic question or something particular?

Well, maybe can you offer me the most important/common reasons?

I know it can be due to impurity.

Offline Corribus

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Re: Excitation vs absorption spectra
« Reply #3 on: September 24, 2019, 09:52:05 PM »
Basically, if there are any electronic states that don't deactivate via fluorescence this will cause the excitation spectra to differ from the absorption spectra. E.g., absorption into a higher lying electronic state that undergoes photochemistry that is competitive with internal conversion to the lower-lying, emissive state. Nonlinear absorption effects or polarization effects can also lead to this phenomenon, and it can also be observed with fluorophores that explore a large conformational space, if the excitation band is sufficiently narrow in bandwidth. These are the first things that come to mind, but certainly there are others.
What men are poets who can speak of Jupiter if he were like a man, but if he is an immense spinning sphere of methane and ammonia must be silent?  - Richard P. Feynman

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