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Energy luminescence decay dynamics

The most important applications of luminescence probing in microemulsions involve the deactivation dynamics or excitation energy transfer properties of the excited states. With a brief flash of light a population of excited species is created in the sample, and the subsequent deactivation is observed over time. The decay of the excited probe, and the fluorescence spectrum, may depend on the interactions with the environment, which reveal useful information. In time-resolved luminescence quenching (TRLQ), however, it is the interaction of the probe with another added component, a quencher, that is studied. This method is dealt with here. For micellar systems, several publications have already discussed it in both experimental and theoretical detail [1-6]. [Pg.605]


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