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Quantum yield wavelength effect

Attention should be paid to possible problems in the measurement of fluorescence quantum yields (some of which are discussed Section 6.1.5) inner filter effects, possible wavelength effects on Op, refractive index corrections, polarization effects, temperature effects, impurity effects, photochemical instability and Raman scattering. [Pg.161]

The effect of phase upon the monomer-dimer equilibrium is pronounced. The quantum yields for dimer formation in liquid-aerated water solution are low (from zero for thymine to 10"2 for other pyrimidines) but the quantum yields for dimer formation in frozen aqueous solutions or in single crystals are much higher (reaching unity in frozen water solution for thymine). The quantum yields for monomerization are uniformly high and are about the same in solution or in solid phase. The net result of this phase effect is that even at optimum wavelengths for dimer formation, the yields of dimers are low in solution and high in solid phases, for all the single bases, nucleosides, or nucleotides. [Pg.195]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.205 ]




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