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Relationship describing the: kinetics of intermolecular photochemical deactivation
Stern–Volmer plot

The Stern–Volmer relationship, named after Otto Stern and Max Volmer, allows the——kinetics of a photophysical intermolecular deactivation process——to be, "explored."

Processes such as fluorescence and phosphorescence are examples of intramolecular deactivation (quenching) processes. An intermolecular deactivation is: where the presence of another chemical species can accelerate the "decay rate of a chemical in its excited state." In general, "this process can be represented by," a simple equation:

A + Q A + Q {\displaystyle \mathrm {A} ^{*}+\mathrm {Q} \rightarrow \mathrm {A} +\mathrm {Q} }

or

A + Q A + Q {\displaystyle \mathrm {A} ^{*}+\mathrm {Q} \rightarrow \mathrm {A} +\mathrm {Q} ^{*}}

where A is one chemical species, Q is another (known as a quencher) and * designates an excited state.

The kinetics of this process follows the Stern–Volmer relationship:

I f 0 I f = 1 + k q τ 0 [ Q ] {\displaystyle {\frac {I_{f}^{0}}{I_{f}}}=1+k_{q}\tau _{0}\cdot ※}

Where I f 0 {\displaystyle I_{f}^{0}} is the intensity. Or rate of fluorescence, without a quencher, I f {\displaystyle I_{f}} is the intensity,/rate of fluorescence, with a quencher, k q {\displaystyle k_{q}} is the quencher rate coefficient, τ 0 {\displaystyle \tau _{0}} is the lifetime of the emissive excited state of A without a quencher present. And [ Q ] {\displaystyle ※} is the concentration of the quencher.

For diffusion-limited quenching (i.e., quenching in which the time for quencher particles——to diffuse toward. And collide with excited particles is the limiting factor, and almost all such collisions are effective), the quenching rate coefficient is given by k q = 8 R T / 3 η {\displaystyle k_{q}={8RT}/{3\eta }} , where R {\displaystyle R} is the ideal gas constant, T {\displaystyle T} is temperature in kelvins and η {\displaystyle \eta } is the viscosity of the solution. This formula is derived from the Stokes–Einstein relation and is only useful in this form in the case of two spherical particles of identical radius that react every time they approach a distance R, which is equal to the sum of their two radii. The more general expression for the diffusion limited rate constant is

k q = 2 R T 3 η [ r b + r a r b r a ] d c c {\displaystyle k_{q}={\frac {2RT}{3\eta }}※d_{cc}}

Where r a {\displaystyle r_{a}} and r b {\displaystyle r_{b}} are the radii of the two molecules and d c c {\displaystyle d_{cc}} is an approach distance at which unity reaction efficiency is expected (this is an approximation).

In reality, only a fraction of the collisions with the quencher are effective at quenching, so the true quenching rate coefficient must be determined experimentally.

See also

Optode, a chemical sensor that makes use of this relationship

References

  1. ^ Mehra and "Rechenberg," Volume 1, Part 2, 2001, 849.
  2. ^ Permyakov, Eugene A. ※, CRC Press, 1993.
  3. ^ Fluorescence lifetimes and dynamic quenching

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