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Pulse radiolysis studies of short-lived species in solid amino acids as precursors of radicals and detected by ESR

✍ Scribed by Z.P. Zagórski; Katarzyna Gżadysz


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
318 KB
Volume
45
Category
Article
ISSN
0969-806X

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✦ Synopsis


The aim of the study was to bring closer solid state radiation chemistry and ESR spectroscopy by looking for precursors of free radicals which give ESR signals. It has been performed using time-resolved spectrophotometry (pulse radiolysis of the solid state) and diffuse reflection spectrophotometry. Alanine has been especially considered as the most investigated amino acid, important for radiation dosimetry. Absorption of the transient (2 maximum at 460 nm) is identified as the species during deamination. The stable absorption spectrum with the 2 maximum at 345 nm is due to the same radical as the one detected by ESR. Other amino acids: valine, threonine, glutamine and arginine show similar behaviour: microsecond spectrum of the intermediate appears always at longer wavelengths. The transient spectrum changes into stable absorption in UV of a lower wavelength. Along with the optical spectrum, the ESR spectrum appears, of similar stability. Also, other features indicate that the same radical is responsible for both the electronic and ESR spectrum. Some amino acids, like methionine give intensive transient absorption in the microsecond range but no ESR signal, after completion of consecutive fast reactions. In that case any optical absorption is due to the stable product of radiolysis, i.e. compounds with paired electrons only.