Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Electronic resonance enhancement

Ishibashi, T. and Onishi, H. (2004) Multiplex sum-frequency spectroscopy with electronic resonance enhancement. Chem. Lett., 33, 1404-1407. [Pg.113]

Two techniques, which appear well suited to the diagnostic probing of practical flames with good spatial and temporal resolution, are coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectroscopy (CARS) and saturated laser fluorescence. The two techniques are complementary in regard to their measurement capabilities. CARS appears most appropriate for thermometry and major species concentration measurements, saturated laser fluorescence to trace radical concentrations. With electronic resonant enhancement (6), CARS may be potentially useful for the latter as well. Fluorescence thermometry is also possible (7, 8) but generally, is more tedious to use than CARS. In this paper, recent research investi-... [Pg.271]

This band was selected rather than the stronger (0,0) band since the Stokes laser is then positioned in the spectral region covered by the dye DCM which has a very broad tuning range necessary to cover the simple, but quite spectrally-separated electronically-resonant CARS spectrum. Electronic resonance enhancement has been observed in OH in flames as seen in Fig. 11. Without enhancement, OH, even at the percent concentrations possible in very high temperature flames, would be submerged within the H2O CARS spectrum whose modulated bandhead is seen near 3652... [Pg.233]

Fig. 10. Energy level diagram for electronic resonance enhancement in the CARS spectrum of hydroxyl, OH, in which the pump laser is tuned into resonance. Strong enhancement occurs only for allowed downward Stokes transitions leading to a triplet spectrum. Fig. 10. Energy level diagram for electronic resonance enhancement in the CARS spectrum of hydroxyl, OH, in which the pump laser is tuned into resonance. Strong enhancement occurs only for allowed downward Stokes transitions leading to a triplet spectrum.
Resonance Raman Spectroscopy. If the excitation wavelength is chosen to correspond to an absorption maximum of the species being studied, a 10 —10 enhancement of the Raman scatter of the chromophore is observed. This effect is called resonance enhancement or resonance Raman (RR) spectroscopy. There are several mechanisms to explain this phenomenon, the most common of which is Franck-Condon enhancement. In this case, a band intensity is enhanced if some component of the vibrational motion is along one of the directions in which the molecule expands in the electronic excited state. The intensity is roughly proportional to the distortion of the molecule along this axis. RR spectroscopy has been an important biochemical tool, and it may have industrial uses in some areas of pigment chemistry. Two biological appHcations include the deterrnination of helix transitions of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) (18), and the elucidation of several peptide stmctures (19). A review of topics in this area has been pubHshed (20). [Pg.210]

Quantum effects are observed in the Raman spectra of SWCNTs through the resonant Raman enhancement process, which is seen experimentally by measuring the Raman spectra at a number of laser excitation energies. Resonant enhancement in the Raman scattering intensity from CNTs occurs when the laser excitation energy corresponds to an electronic transition between the sharp features (i.e., (E - ,)" type singularities at energy ,) in the ID electronic DOS of the valence and conduction bands of the carbon CNT. [Pg.59]

Unfortunately, predissociation of the excited-state limits the resolution of our photodissociation spectrum of FeO. One way to overcome this limitation is by resonance enhanced photodissociation. Molecules are electronically excited to a state that lies below the dissociation limit, and photodissociate after absorption of a second photon. Brucat and co-workers have used this technique to obtain a rotationally resolved spectrum of CoO from which they derived rotational... [Pg.348]

Ina similarmarmerto surface-enhanced Raman scattering, surface-enhancement of hyper-Raman scattering is a promising method to study adsorbed molecules on metal surfaces [24]. Based on recent developments in plasmonics, design and fabrication of metal substrates with high enhancement activities is now becoming possible [21]. Combination of the surface enhancement with the electronic resonances would also be helpful for the practical use of hyper-Raman spectroscopy. Development of enhanced hyper-Raman spectroscopy is awaited for the study of solid/liquid interfaces. [Pg.96]

The ionization of ammonia clusters (i.e. multiphoton ionization,33,35,43,70,71 single photon ionization,72-74 electron impact ionization,75 etc.) mainly leads to formation of protonated clusters. For some years there has been a debate about the mechanism of formation of protonated clusters under resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization conditions, especially regarding the possible alternative sequences of absorption, dissociation, and ionization. Two alternative mechanisms63,64,76,77 have been proposed absorption-ionization-dissociation (AID) and absorption-dissociation-ionization (ADI) mechanisms see Figure 5. [Pg.196]

RR spectra obtained at resonance with the third electronic band of each ion leads to resonance enhancement to both the and V2 bands (and their overtones) to comparable extents. [Pg.228]

The magnitudes of geometric changes in molecules on electronic excitation can be determined from the excitation profiles of resonance-enhanced Raman bands, most accurately where both the resonant absorption band and the profiles show vibronic structure. [Pg.490]

It was noted early by Reed and others that the IETS spectrum could exhibit both absorption and emission peaks - that is, the plots of Fig. 9 could have positive excursions and negative excursions called peaks and dips. The simple analysis suggested in Fig. 9 implies that it should always be absorptive behavior, and therefore that there should always be a peak (a maximum, an enhancement) in the IETS spectrum at the vibrational resonances. It has been observed, however, that dips sometimes occur in these spectra. These have been particularly visible in small molecules in junctions, such as in the work of van Ruitenbeek [92, 109] (Fig. 12). Here, formal analysis indicates that, as the injection gap gets smaller, the existence of an inelastic vibrational channel does not contribute a second independent channel to the transport, but rather opens up an interference [100]. This interference can actually impede transport, resulting in a dip in the spectrum. Qualitatively, this occurs because the system is close to an electronic resonance without the vibrational coupling the conductance is close to g0, and the interference subtracts from the current. [Pg.21]

Although chemisorption is not essential, when it does occur there may be further enhancement of the Raman signal, since the formation of new chemical bonds and the consequent perturbation of adsorbate electronic energy levels can lead to a surface-induced RR effect. The combination of surface and resonance enhancement (SERRS) can occur when adsorbates have intense electronic absorption bands in the same spectral region as the metal surface plasmon resonance, yielding an overall enhancement as large as 10lo-1012. [Pg.761]


See other pages where Electronic resonance enhancement is mentioned: [Pg.288]    [Pg.557]    [Pg.563]    [Pg.1206]    [Pg.570]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.557]    [Pg.563]    [Pg.1206]    [Pg.570]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.1294]    [Pg.2490]    [Pg.881]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.220]    [Pg.341]    [Pg.342]    [Pg.349]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.624]    [Pg.627]    [Pg.669]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.316]    [Pg.228]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.160]   


SEARCH



Electronic enhancement

Resonance enhancement

Resonant enhancement

© 2024 chempedia.info