Laser photochemistry of polymers
β Scribed by Masuhara, Hiroshi
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1985
- Weight
- 880 KB
- Volume
- 13
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0025-116X
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β¦ Synopsis
bstract -Absorption spectra of poly(N-vinyl-{arbazole) and related polymers in the excited singlet, triplet, cationic, and anionic states were measured by nanosecond and picosecond laser photolysis methods and compared with those of model bichromophoric compounds. Absorption spectral shape of the excited singlet and cationic states is a function of polymer structure and sensitive to relative geometrical structure of two carbazolyl
The excited singlet species in po1y~~O~~~;ilcarbazole) are the sandwich excimer, the excited dimer with the partial overlap structure between two chromophores, and the so-called second excimer. The formation process of the sandwich excimer consists of an instantaneous rise and a slow one with a timeconstant of a few hundred ps. The absorption spectrum o f poly(N-vinylcarbazole) cation can be reproduced by a superposition of absorption bands of the sandwich dimer cation, the dimer cation with the partial overlap, and the dimer cation with the open form. On the other hand, absorption spectra of the triplet and anionic polymers are similar to those of the corresponding monomer model compound, showing a very weak interchromophoric interaction. All these results indicate that electronic excitation and charge in these polymers are not delocalized over several chromophores but trapped in some monomer and dimer sites. Dynamic behavior such as conformational change, intersystem crossing, photochemical formation yield of ion radicals, and their decay kinetics was also studied in detail.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Irradiation of some poly(N-vinylcarbazole) films with a 248 nm excimer laser resulted in their ablation, giving an etched hole with a submicrometer depth. A characteristic periodic pattern and small particles with diameter of the order of submicrometers were formed in the etched area. This ablation
Multiphoton krser-induced decomposition is reported here for photolysis of ketene with 9.260 pm radiation from a pulsed CO2 TEA laser. Chemical end products of this photolysis were primanly Ha and CO. Visible chemihtminescence, attributed to Ca Swan band emission, wns observed during the fust = 1 ps
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The photochemical ring opening and ring cleavage reactions of 6b,8a-dihydrocyclobut[a]acenaphthylene (1) and two similar compounds are described. These reactions occur at room temperature only if the irradiating light intensity is greater than MW/cm2, easily obtained with excimer and dye lasers. Th