phosphorimetry
Phosphorimetry is a luminescence spectroscopy technique that measures phosphorescence emitted by a sample after optical excitation. Phosphorescence originates from triplet-state relaxation, and its emission can be observed after excitation has ceased, because the triplet decay is comparatively slow. This delay allows selective detection by suppressing short-lived fluorescence and background signals.
Instrumentation and methods: Typical instruments include an excitation source (pulsed lamp or laser), excitation monochromator, sample
Applications: It is used for quantitative analysis of phosphorescent or sensitized compounds, particularly those with long-lived
Limitations and considerations: Oxygen quenches triplet states, necessitating deaeration or inert conditions. Many substances exhibit weak
Overview: Since its mid-20th-century development and with advances in pulsed excitation and time-gated detection, phosphorimetry provides