Friday, 20 February 2015

visible light - How does stuff glow in the dark?



Many things have glow in the dark properties (glow sticks, paint, toys ..), and I am wondering what is the physics behind them. How do these materials store light energy and emit it later when dark?


What dictates the wavelength(s) of the glow? Is there a limit on how much energy can be stored and recovered in these materials? Do they give out heat as well as light?



Answer



When one excites fluorescence with light (e.g. blue light), the incoming photon pushes an electron into a higher state. Generally one always excites vibrational states (movement of the molecules' atoms) as well. Therefore the emitted photon has lower energy (e.g. green light). The lost energy (internal conversion) heats the solvent or lattice. The shift in frequency (from blue to green) is called Stokes shift.


People plot these energy levels in Jablonski diagrams. I stole this from http://biophys.med.unideb.hu/old/pharmacy/fluorescence_print.pdf Jablonski diagram


You can only excite as many electrons as there are in the material. This means that absorbing laser goggle are not safe for high power pulsed laser. The early photons of the pulse will saturate all the electrons in the goggles and the rest of the pulse can advance into the eyes and do damage.


In a glow stick the excitation is done by chemical energy. Hydrogen peroxide splits some organic molecule and one of the produced excited carbon dioxide molecules can transfer its energy to a fluorophore. I once saw an experiment where the chemicals from the glow stick were added to tea and the tea's chlorophyll started glowing in red.


The only reason I can think of right now, why anyone would want to store energy like this, is to be able to access it with the speed of light. In high power pulsed lasers special crystals are pumped into the higher state and the energy can suddenly be converted into photons. That way it is possible to create pulses with Petawatts of power.


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