A.J. Campillo
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Chemical Physics Letters | 1977
A.J. Campillo; Ronald C. Hyer; S.L. Shapiro; Charles E. Swenberg
Abstract The efficiency of fluorescence in crystalline tetracene was studied as a function of excitation intensity with single picosecond laser pulses. Theoretical fits to the experimental fluorescence-quenching curves, at room temperature and at 170 K, for both a and b -incident polarizations, gave a singlet-singlet annihilation rate of γ ss = 10 −7 cm 3 s −1 , to within a factor of two. This rate constant was confirmed by directly measuring the dependence of fast radiative lifetimes on excitation intensity. We also infer a value for the singlet diffusion rate, D s , or 4 × 10 −2 cm 2 s −1 to within a factor of two.
FEBS Letters | 1977
A.J. Campillo; S.L. Shapiro; Nicholas E. Geacintov; Charles E. Swenberg
1. Introduction Within the last few years there have been extensive investigations of the fluorescence from photosynthetic systems using picosecond lasers as excitation sources [l-l 11. Such studies have established that the quenching of the prompt fluorescence, with increasing incident excitation intensity employing a single pulse, arises primarily from singlet--singlet exciton annihila- tion [2,3,7-91. When the mode of excitation consists of a train of pulses or of a microsecond laser pulse, there exists additional quenching of the fluorescence quantum yield arising from long-lived quenchers, presumably triplet excitons [2,3,10] , which either arise from intersystem crossing from the singlet mani- fold or from random recombination of electrons and holes formed from the autoionization final state channel of singlet fusion [8]. Recently, Geacintov et al. [8] have shown that the quantum yield quenching at emission wavelengths of 685 nm and 735 nm were identical, within experimental error, when single picosecond excitation pulses were employed. This identity in the quenching curves was interpreted in terms of the tripartite fluorescence model with bimolecular singlet fusion occurring exclusively within the light harvesting antenna system. Strong support for this interpretation was provided by the observation of an intensity-independent (for intensities below 10” photons cm-* per pulse) 316 lifetime for the 735 nm emission [l 1] . Presumably, singlet fusion reactions are either inoperative or inefficient within the PS I antenna chlorophyll molecules, at least for intensities below lo’* photons cm-’ per pulse. Within the light harvesting and PS II antenna pigments which give-rise to the 685 nm emission, singlet exciton fusions do give rise to a strong decrease of the fluorescence lifetime with increasing intensity. It was concluded that the pigments which are responsible for the 735 nm emission derive their energy by singlet exciton transfer from the light harvesting system and not by direct photon absorp- tion at 530 nm. In this paper we measure the risetime for the 735 nm emission and identify this time lag with the transfer rate from the light harvesting system to the PS I pigment molecules which give rise to the 735 nm fluorescence band at low temperatures. 2. Materials and methods The experimental arrangement for fluorescence lifetime measurements was similar to that reported previously [3] . A 1060 nm, 30 ps pulse was selected from the pulse train emitted by a modelocked Nd:YAG laser, frequency shifted to 530 nm by passage through a KDP crystal, and then was allowed to excite the spinach samples. The samples, chloroplasts prepared from spinach leaves as described in [ 121 , were
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1975
V.H. Kollman; S.L. Shapiro; A.J. Campillo
Abstract The fluorescence decay times for the species Anacystis nidulans and Chlorella pyrenoidosa are measured by means of a streak camera to be 75 ± 10 and 41 ± 5 psec, respectively. Concentrated solutions of chlorophyll a are shown to have fluorescence decay times as short as 10 psec. Fluorescence decay curves similar to that of the living cells can be generated by mixing cellular component molecules at comparable concentrations to that present in living cells.
Chemical Physics Letters | 1979
A.J. Campillo; J.H. Clark; S.L. Shapiro; Kenneth R. Winn; P.K. Woodbridge
Abstract The rate constant for protonation of the electronically excited state of coumarin 102 in water has been determined to be (1,4 × 0.4) × 10 10 mol −1 s −1 using picosecond spectroscopy. The laser pH jump technique is shown to be suitable for rapidly decreasing, as well as increasing, solution pH.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1977
Nicholas E. Geacintov; Jacques Breton; Charles E. Swenberg; A.J. Campillo; Ronald C. Hyer; Stanley L. Shapiro
Studies of the fluorescence quantum yield and decay times, determined at the emission maxima of 685 and 735 nm, using picosecond laser pulses for excitation, indicate that the pigments which are responsible for the 735 nm emission derive their energy by transfer of singlet excitons from the light-harvesting pigments and not by direct absorption of photons. Microsecond pulse laser studies of the fluorescence quantum yields at these two fluorescence wavelengths indicate that long lived quenchers (most probably triplet states), which quench singlet excitions, accumulate preferentially within the long wavelength pigment system which gives rise to the 735 nm emission band.
Optics Communications | 1975
S.L. Shapiro; A.J. Campillo; V.H. Kollman; W.B. Goad
Abstract Fluorescent risetimes are measured to be less than 20 ps for DNA-acridine orange complexes. This result is consistent with a rapid non-radiative depletion of the excited singlet state of DNA due to exciton-phonon interactions.
Optics Letters | 1979
A.J. Campillo; Ronald C. Hyer; S.L. Shapiro
We report a completely grating tuned (1.9-2.4 microm) picosecond traveling-wave infrared generator capable of controlled spectral-bandwidth operation down to the Fourier-transform limit. Subsequent down-conversion in CdSe extends the tuning range to 10-20 microm.
Chemical Physics Letters | 1977
A.J. Campillo; Stanley L. Shapiro; Charles E. Swenberg
Abstract The kinetics of electronic energy transfer from host to guest have been measured for a tetracene crystal doped with pentacene. With single picosecond pulse excitation and streak camera diagnostics, the fluorescence risetime of the guest is measured to be the same as the decay time of the host. For low pentacene concentrations the exponential decay of the host at 170 K is consistent with a diffusion model for singlet migration from host to guest. At high intensities, no evidence was found for guest saturation because of the dominating effect of bimolecular exciton annihilation in the host.
Optics Communications | 1974
A.J. Campillo; B. Carpenter; B.E. Newnam; Stanley L. Shapiro
Abstract Soft apertures have been constructed for tailoring the spatial profile of a light beam to minimize harmful diffraction effects that lead to self-focusing and consequent damage while still enabling substantial energy extraction from amplifiers.
Optics Letters | 1979
A.J. Campillo; Ronald C. Hyer; S.L. Shapiro
Picosecond infrared continua are produced by propagating an intense ultrashort 1.064-microm pulse through a LiNbO(3) crystal set near the degenerate point. Under our experimental conditions, gain broadening is identified as the principal mechanism leading to the superbroad spectral output.