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Electronic transitions, and

Drickamer H G and Frank C W 1973 Electronic Transitions and the High-Pressure Chemistry and Physics of Solids (London Chapman and Haii)... [Pg.1966]

Spectroscopy in the uv—vis detects electronic transitions, and so is appHcable to both atoms and molecules. This is a mature technique having important quahtative and quantitative appHcations (137—141). [Pg.316]

The ability to measure the energy of electronic transitions and their line widths accurately, in a convenient manner, is one of the most important aspects of semiconductor characterization. The former can be used to evaluate alloy compositions... [Pg.385]

RAIRS spectra contain absorption band structures related to electronic transitions and vibrations of the bulk, the surface, or adsorbed molecules. In reflectance spectroscopy the ahsorhance is usually determined hy calculating -log(Rs/Ro), where Rs represents the reflectance from the adsorhate-covered substrate and Rq is the reflectance from the bare substrate. For thin films with strong dipole oscillators, the Berre-man effect, which can lead to an additional feature in the reflectance spectrum, must also be considered (Sect. 4.9 Ellipsometry). The frequencies, intensities, full widths at half maximum, and band line-shapes in the absorption spectrum yield information about adsorption states, chemical environment, ordering effects, and vibrational coupling. [Pg.251]

The dielectric medium is normally taken to have a constant value of e, but may for some purposes also be taken to depend for example on the distance from M. For dynamical phenomena it can also be allowed to be frequency dependent i.e. the response of the solvent is different for a fast reaction, such as an electronic transition, and a slow reaction, such as a molecular reorientation. [Pg.395]

Vibrationally mediated photodissociation (VMP) can be used to measure the vibrational spectra of small ions, such as V (OCO). Vibrationally mediated photodissociation is a double resonance technique in which a molecule first absorbs an IR photon. Vibrationally excited molecules are then selectively photodissociated following absorption of a second photon in the UV or visible [114—120]. With neutral molecules, VMP experiments are usually used to measure the spectroscopy of regions of the excited-state potential energy surface that are not Franck-Condon accessible from the ground state and to see how different vibrations affect the photodissociation dynamics. In order for VMP to work, there must be some wavelength at which vibrationally excited molecules have an electronic transition and photodissociate, while vibrationally unexcited molecules do not. In practice, this means that the ion has to have a... [Pg.343]

Drickamer HG, Frank CW (1973) Electronic transitions and the high pressure chemistry and physics of solids. Chapman and Hall, London... [Pg.149]

Shukla MK, Mishra SK, Kumar A, Mishra PC (2000) An ab initio study of excited states of guanine in the gas phase and aqueous media Electronic transitions and mechanism of spectral oscillations. J Comput Chem 21 826... [Pg.337]

CLASSIFICATION OF MOLECULAR ELECTRONIC TRANSITIONS AND EXCITED STATES... [Pg.13]

To aid our understanding of absorption and emission processes, Eq. (2.1) can be expanded in terms of electronic, vibronic (vibrational components of an electronic transition), and spin wave functions ... [Pg.317]

In addition to the described above methods, there are computational QM-MM (quantum mechanics-classic mechanics) methods in progress of development. They allow prediction and understanding of solvatochromism and fluorescence characteristics of dyes that are situated in various molecular structures changing electrical properties on nanoscale. Their electronic transitions and according microscopic structures are calculated using QM coupled to the point charges with Coulombic potentials. It is very important that in typical QM-MM simulations, no dielectric constant is involved Orientational dielectric effects come naturally from reorientation and translation of the elements of the system on the pathway of attaining the equilibrium. Dynamics of such complex systems as proteins embedded in natural environment may be revealed with femtosecond time resolution. In more detail, this topic is analyzed in this volume [76]. [Pg.219]

For the following high spin ions, describe the nature of the possible electronic transitions and give them in the order of increasing energy. [Pg.669]

A molecule exhibits a great difference in the speeds of electronic transitions and vibrational atomic motions. The absorbtion of photon and a change in the electronic state of a molecule occurs in 10 15—10—18 s. The vibrational motion of atoms in a molecule takes place in 10 1 s. Therefore, an electronically excited molecule has the interatomic configuration of the nonexited state during some period of time. Different situations for the exited molecule can exist. Each situation is governed by the Franck-Condon principle [203,204],... [Pg.150]

Relationship between electronic transitions and absorption curves is illustrated in Figure 21.3. [Pg.299]

Figure 21.3 Diagrammatic representation of Potential Energy of a diatomic molecule showing (A) Potential Energy-Nuclear Separation Curves (B) Relationship between Electronic Transitions and Absorption Curves. Figure 21.3 Diagrammatic representation of Potential Energy of a diatomic molecule showing (A) Potential Energy-Nuclear Separation Curves (B) Relationship between Electronic Transitions and Absorption Curves.
Surface photovoltage spectroscopy (SPS) in Fig. 6.5 was used to determine the surface acidity of JML-1 by measuring transition of electrons between the interface and the surface. The JML-I40 calcined at 550°C exhibited two peaks at 596 nm and 677 nm, whereas the sample without calcination had only one peak at 330 nm. The peak at 330 nm is assigned to the band-band electron transition and those at 596 nm and 677 nm are attributed to the surface-related transitions. The observation of these surface-related transitions indicates the presence of positive charges on the surface of the calcined sample, suggesting that the acidity of JML-1 catalyst is resulted from a large amount of SZ acidic sites on the silica surface. [Pg.77]


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Electron Configurations of the Transition Metals and Their Ions

Electron tunneling reactions between inorganic ion radicals and transition metal compounds

Electronic Excitation Energies and Transition Moments

Electronic Spectra and Magnetism of Transition Element Complexes

Electronic Structure of Naked, Ligated and Supported Transition Metal Clusters from First Principles Density Functional Calculations

Electronic Transition and Band Gap

Electronic Transitions and Lifetime of Excited States in Porphyrin-Based Compounds

Electronic Transitions and Their Nomenclature

Electronic and magnetic transitions

Electronic energy levels and transitions in transition-metal complexes

Fluorescence Anisotropy and Electronic Transition

Molecular orbitals and electronic transitions

Orbitals and Hybridization in Electron-Sharing Bonds of Transition Metals

Pauling 3-Electron Bonds and Hypoligated Transition Metal Complexes

Simple oxides, structural and electronic phase transitions

Transition Metals in Catalysis and Electron Transport

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