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Questions tagged [fluorescence]

For questions relating to the radiation emitted by substances as a result of incident radiation.

32 questions with no upvoted or accepted answers
5 votes
0 answers
47 views

Is there any molecule describable by three-level with mixed parity and transition dipole moments in different directions?

I would like to know if there are molecules described by a three-level system with mixed parity and transition dipole moments in different directions. By mixed parity I mean all three transitions can ...
Pu Zhang's user avatar
  • 155
4 votes
0 answers
71 views

Why wouldn't a standard addition fluorometric method return the same starting concentration of a solution used to make the standards?

I am trying out a new standard addition method and having some very basic problems. I am hoping someone could point me in the right direction. I am using a fluorometric method to quantify ammonium in ...
user112717's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
27 views

Non-binding buffer at pKa of roughly 6 that dissolves in ethanol?

I'm trying to find a proper buffer for my experiment, which I'd appreciate some suggestions on. I have a solution in which I want to measure the concentration of magnesium ions using a fluorescent ...
Helena's user avatar
  • 31
3 votes
0 answers
39 views

Detection of contamination from salicylic acid via either single excitation fluorometer or via absorbance

My colleague detected fluorescent contamination likely from salicylic acid in some water samples. I have made a new batch and want to check whether my new samples also have this contamination. 1. Can ...
claire's user avatar
  • 31
3 votes
0 answers
78 views

Fluorophores with high quantum yield and low lifetime

Does anyone know of any fluorophore or family of fluorophores with a relatively high fluorescence quantum yield (larger than 0.1) and a short lifetime (below hundreds of picoseconds)? I have been ...
Paul Logan's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
41 views

Wave Dispersive X-ray Fluoresence and Bragg's Law

Thermo Fisher website explains that "WDXRF uses crystals to disperse the fluorescence spectrum into individual wavelengths of each element, providing high resolution and low background spectra ...
user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
99 views

How can I set up and process my excitation-emission matrices properly?

I'm running EEMS on some water samples on a Horiba Fluoromax 4 spectrofluorometer. Method below. $\pu{240-580nm}$ emission, $\pu{5nm}$ interval, $\pu{1nm}$ width. $\pu{240-480nm}$ excitation, $\pu{...
dogman's user avatar
  • 61
3 votes
0 answers
130 views

Fluorescence Intensity and Fluorescence Quantum Yield

I plan to use ImageJ to analyze some fluorescence experiments where the pH changes. I will be using fluorescein as the indicator for the pH changes and it will be present in low concentration (like is ...
rdemyan's user avatar
  • 173
2 votes
0 answers
39 views

High voltage arc treatment leads to the appearance of fluorescent granules in soda baking. Perhaps it's the F-centers?

I have a high-voltage converter at home, consisting of a horizontal "flyback" transformer from an old tube TV, field-effect power transistors and a square-wave generator with adjustable ...
Nikita Danilov's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
46 views

DNA staining agent with good absorbance at 532 nm

I need to stain some double-stranded DNA with an intercalating fluorescent dye. For imaging, I am using a microscope setup equiped with a 532 nm green laser. What is the staining agent of choice to ...
Brenlla's user avatar
  • 201
2 votes
0 answers
58 views

What causes horizontal lines on an excitation-emission matrix in fluorometry?

I am doing excitation-emission matrices to test for CDOM, and we just got some brand new quarts cuvettes. When I hold them in front of a light, they're totally clear and clean. I ran a sample, and in ...
dogman's user avatar
  • 61
2 votes
0 answers
1k views

Data analysis in TCSPC for fluorescene decay (reconvolution with measured IRF)

I am trying to understand the data analysis of fluorescence decay counts measured by TCSPC technique, particularly with reconvolution with measured IRF. I am able to get the fitted counts (given by ...
Crops's user avatar
  • 139
2 votes
0 answers
50 views

Chemical Potential in the Fluorescent Molecule

I'm reading this paper, which states that the chemical potential $\mu$ is determined by the steady-state balance of up and down transitions in a fluorescent molecule. I am happy with this ...
Tomi's user avatar
  • 590
2 votes
0 answers
81 views

What's causing this dip in the FCS curve?

This is a fluorescence correlation spectroscopy measurement of light harvesting complexes. What could be causing the dip at 100 microseconds? Edit: The same thing was observed using fluorescence ...
user2132672's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
49 views

How the optical fibre pH microsensors work?

Just browsed through the chemical sensor products of the company, called PreSens (https://www.presens.de/products/ph/sensors) in order to look for a precise method to measure pH change in a ...
Ryksa's user avatar
  • 59
1 vote
0 answers
83 views

Spectroscopic methods for quantifying peptides/proteins with or without Tryptophan or Tyrosine content

I have several peptides (20-50 amino acids long) which I want to quantify the solubility/concentration in a solvent at certain temperature and pH. These peptides may or may not contain Tryptophan or ...
littleworth's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
45 views

How can I save an EEM file on a Fluoromax4?

I'm trying to run excitation-emission matrices on some water samples, but I'm running into some software issues that the manuals aren't helpful for. In order to use R studio to extract my data, I need ...
dogman's user avatar
  • 61
1 vote
0 answers
89 views

What is the amount of UV light required to make fluorophores glow and what is the minimum amount of electricity needed to achieve this?

So I have heard that fluorophores glow under UV light, so I was wondering what is the minimum amount of UV light needed to make the fluorophores glow and what would be the minimum amount of ...
Tsar Asterov XVII's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
38 views

Microcopy Fluorescence filter set usefulness

I have a brief doubt and maybe someone around here can give as some help. We are doing a pilot study on microplastics using a fluorescence method (red nile). The dye is solvachromic, so it's emission ...
AnastD's user avatar
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1 vote
0 answers
41 views

Why does the emission of dansyl group diminish with time in this experiment?

I don't know how to make sense of this. I what is happening when an enzyme (carboxypeptidase, which contains tryptophan as its only chromophore and uses a Zn(II) ion in its active center) hydrolises a ...
coffee_pls's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
117 views

Fluorometer for measuring fluorescence in a sheet of water

Does anyone know of a fluorometer that I could use to measure fluorescence in a thin sheet of water. So it would be like holding a piece of writing or printer paper vertically and trying to get a ...
rdemyan's user avatar
  • 173
1 vote
0 answers
102 views

Common chemcials that produce phosphorescence

Are there any common lab chemicals or household stuff that produce phosphorescence? I am aware of ZnS, CaS, Fluorescein, Erythrosin B, Vanillin Benzaldehyde, Vitamin B2, Tryptophan etc. I just need ...
Crops's user avatar
  • 139
1 vote
0 answers
460 views

Choosing the right wavelength for calibration curve and for analysis of actual results

Introduction: I am currently conducting a series of experiments in which I am studying the transport of polystyrene nanoparticles (PNPs) through sand and soil. This is done in sand/soil columns, into ...
Don_S's user avatar
  • 1,410
1 vote
0 answers
39 views

Does the laser side of laser fluorescence spectroscopy have to be so complicated?

I understand the working principle behind zapping some gas and looking at spectral emissions, and I can see why photodetection is so difficult. But I thought that pointing a laser into a vacuum ...
Knob Scratcher's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
40 views

Strange Binding Curve DNA:Protein Interaction

So I did some DNA:Protein Interaction studies using Fluorescence Polarisation Assays. I have fluorescently labelled DNA and add my Protein of interest. Down below you see an exemplary plot of the ...
TheChemist's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
153 views

Dark smudge at the TLC solvent front

I have recently started using TLC in my graduate work to test for the cleavage of a cyclic oligo-adenylate in an enzymatic reaction. The sample I'm spotting on my plate is in an aqueous solution ...
Thom Hallmark's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
466 views

Why is there a mirror image effect in the absorbance and fluorescence spectra?

I've read some answers online but I still can't seem to understand the mirror image effect. Why is the highest energy absorption (v" = 0 to v' = 4) the lowest energy fluorescence (v' = 4 to v&...
Mark's user avatar
  • 31
0 votes
0 answers
104 views

Which commonly available UV light source to use with fluorescein

I want to start experimenting with fluorescein. I have a 353 nm UV light source, but am thinking that it might be too short since it looks like peak excitation occurs at 494 nm. So am I correct in ...
rdemyan's user avatar
  • 173
0 votes
0 answers
43 views

When an electron is excited to a singlet state, must it flip its spin state to enter the triplet state and flip once more to the ground state?

I understand the Jablonski diagram in that it has intersystem crossing from the singlet state to the triplet state, but how many spin switches are necessary to complete to phosphores? When an electron ...
C. Al's user avatar
  • 21
0 votes
0 answers
204 views

Is the activation energy always inversely proportional to the reaction rate?

When I obtained the activation energy using the Arrhenius equation for a 10-minute glowstick (rapid, rigorous reaction), it was almost 4 times that of a 12-hour glowstick (slow, mild reaction). ...
Andrew Norfield's user avatar

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