fotoluminescens
Fotoluminescens, or photoluminescence, is the emission of light by a material that has absorbed photons. The process involves electronic transitions: after absorption, excited electrons relax to lower energy levels and emit photons as they return to the ground state. The emitted light often has lower energy than the absorbed light, a phenomenon known as the Stokes shift.
Photoluminescens includes fluorescence and phosphorescence. Fluorescence arises from singlet excited states and typically ceases within about
It occurs in a wide range of materials, including organic fluorophores, inorganic phosphors, rare-earth-doped crystals, quantum
Photoluminescens is used in lighting and displays (phosphor-converted LEDs, OLEDs), bioimaging and sensors, and solar-energy technologies
Measurement employs photoluminescence spectroscopy, including emission spectra, excitation spectra, and time-resolved PL. Factors such as temperature,
Prominent examples include Eu3+- and Tb3+-doped hosts, CdSe and perovskite quantum dots, fluorescein and rhodamine dyes,