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Title: The contribution of electronically excited states to the radiation chemistry of organic systems: Progress report, June 30, 1988--April 30, 1989

Technical Report ·
DOI:https://doi.org/10.2172/5998536· OSTI ID:5998536

The photoionization current from anthracene in liquid hydrocarbons has been studied as a function of excitation energy. From the dependence of the photocurrent spectrum on the magnitude of an externally applied electric field, it is deduced that the appearance of a fine structure in these spectra is mainly attributable, not to variability in the electron yield probability as others have conjectured, but rather to an energy dependence of the electron's thermalization range parameter. Solvent effects on the diffuseness of this structure are also explainable on this basis. By monitoring the fluorescence from hexafluorobenzene dissolved in the non-fluorescent hydrocarbon solvents, 2,3,4-trimethylpentane, 2,2-dimethylbutane, cyclopentane and tetramethylsilane excited with ..beta../sup /minus// particles, it has been possible to extract the geminate ion-pair scavenging probability, p/sup /dagger//. This is found to have a dependence on hexafluorobenzene concentration, c, entirely similar to what has previously been reported for p/sup /dagger// extracted from quenching of solvent fluorescence by perfluorocarbon scavengers. Thus it is now demonstrated that two different fluorescent techniques provide an expression for p/sup /dagger// that is distinctly disparate from that initially introduced by Warman, Asmus and Schuler to explain their results on chemical scavengers. Origins for this difference are considered. Preliminary attempts to locate a triplet-state emission from saturated hydrocarbons excited biphotonically with 307 nm XeCl excimer laser light have thus far been unsuccessful. 15 refs.

Research Organization:
Minnesota Univ., Minneapolis (USA). Dept. of Chemistry
DOE Contract Number:
FG02-85ER13404
OSTI ID:
5998536
Report Number(s):
DOE/ER/13404-4; ON: DE89013111
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English