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Total Emission Time Resolved Decay: a Method for Measurement and Resolution of Broad-Band Emission.

Suraj Kumar PanigrahiAshok Kumar Mishra
Published in: Journal of fluorescence (2020)
This article reports a time-resolved fluorescence data acquisition technique termed as "Total Emission Time Resolved Decay" (TETRD). TETRD is recorded by using zero-order diffraction of emission grating in TCSPC instrument. TETRD decay curve has entire wavelength dependent decay information buried in it. Cut-off filters are used to avoid scattering contamination. Two existing approaches are used for analysing the interconnected TETRD data. (i) First, global analysis: for discretely decaying multiple components, TETRD dataset is analyzed using global analysis. The normalized pre-exponentials (αi) and relative amplitudes (fi) recovered from global analysis reflect the individual component emission more faithfully and resembles with steady-state spectral data as well. (ii) Second, stretched exponential fitting (StrEF): for continuous lifetime distribution systems, StrEF (I(t) = I0 exp[-(t/τ)1/h]) has been used to analyse TETRD data. The average lifetime (τ) of StrEF matches well with the average lifetime of multi-exponential fitting, the heterogeneity factor (h) of StrEF is an additional parameter, which informs about local heterogeneity in the system. It is shown that the lifetimes obtained with TETRD matches well with the lifetimes obtained using conventional time resolved emission spectra (TRES). TETRD holds advantage in rapid data acquisition and facilitates inclusion of another variable (like concentration, solvent composition, pH, excitation wavelength etc.) into experimental design. Further, with the use of an appropriate data analysis tool, the multi-component decay profiles can be resolved conveniently.
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