Decreasing luminescence lifetime of evaporating phosphorescent droplets

Laser-inducedphosphorescence has been used extensively to study spray dynamics. It is important to understand the influence of dropletevaporation in the interpretation of such measurements, as it increases luminescence quenching. By suspending a single evaporating n-heptane droplet in an acoustic levitator, the properties of lanthanide-complex europium-thenoyltrifluoroacetone-trioctylphosphine oxide (Eu-TTA-TOPO)phosphorescence are determined through high-speed imaging. A decrease was found in the measuredphosphorescence decay coefficient (780  → 200 μs) with decreasing droplet volumes (10−9 → 10–11 m3) corresponding to increasing concentrations (10−4 → 10−2 M). This decrease continues up to the point of shell-formation at supersaturated concentrations. The diminished luminescence is shown not to be attributable to triplet-triplet annihilation, quenching between excited triplet-state molecules. Instead, the pure exponential decays found in the measurements show that a non-phosphorescent quencher, such as free TTA/TOPO, can be attributable to this decay. The concentration dependence of thephosphorescence lifetime can therefore be used as a diagnostic ofevaporation in sprays.
Source: Applied Physics Letters - Category: Physics Authors: Source Type: research
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