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Nanosecond fluorescence sensing

While such a film format is not intended for routine use in e.g. soHd phase synthesis, it has proved useful for spectroscopic mechanistic investigation of polymer-supported metal complex catalysts [49] and we, with our collaborators, are employing such films as a component in nanosecond fluorescence sensing devices [50]. [Pg.11]

The fluorescence lifetime can be measured by time-resolved methods after excitation of the fluorophore with a light pulse of brief duration. The lifetime is then measured as the elapsed time for the fluorescence emission intensity to decay to 1/e of the initial intensity. Commonly used fluorophores have lifetimes of a few nanoseconds, whereas the longer-lived chelates of europium(III) and terbium(III) have lifetimes of about 10-1000 /tsec (Table 14.1). Chapter 10 (this volume) describes the advantages of phase-modulation fluorometers for sensing applications, as a method to measure the fluorescence lifetime. Phase-modulation immunoassays have been reported (see Section 14.5.4.3.), and they are in fact based on lifetime changes. [Pg.452]

Fluorescence depolarization measurements of aromatic residues and other probes in proteins can provide information on the amplitudes and time scales of motions in the picosecond-to-nanosecond range. As for NMR relaxation, the parameters of interest are related to time correlation functions whose decay is determined by reorientation of certain vectors associated with the probe (i.e., vectors between nuclei for NMR relaxation and transition moment vectors for fluorescence depolarization). Because the contributions of the various types of motions to the NMR relaxation rates depend on the Fourier transform of the appropriate correlation functions, it is difficult to obtain a unique result from the measurements. As described above, most experimental estimates of the time scales and magnitudes of the motions generally depend on the particular choice of model used for their interpretation. Fluorescence depolarization, although more limited in the sense that only a few protein residues (i.e., tryptophans and tyrosines) can be studied with present techniques, has the distinct advantage that the measured quantity is directly related to the decay of the correlation function. [Pg.211]


See other pages where Nanosecond fluorescence sensing is mentioned: [Pg.197]    [Pg.214]    [Pg.436]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.304]    [Pg.469]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.660]    [Pg.322]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.1203]    [Pg.704]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.469]   


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