Paper
10 March 1987 Dynamics Of Solvated Electron Formation From Dna Irradiated By Intense Laser Pulses
Paul A. Cornelius, Daniel K. Negus
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 0712, Lasers in Medicine; (1987) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.937330
Event: Cambridge Symposium-Fiber/LASE '86, 1986, Cambridge, MA, United States
Abstract
Solvated electrons are formed in high yield and can be detected by transient absorption spectroscopy when calf thymus DNA is irradiated with laser pulses at 266 nm having peak intensities above 1014 W/m2. Approximately 20% of the initially appearing absorption strength decays with a time constant of 400 ps, while the remaining 80% is long-lived (> 10 ns). The decaying component may indicate geminate recombination of the photoejected electron. Spectral evidence suggests that the bases are the site of ionization. The signal is observed to depend nonlinearly on the excitation pulse energy, indicating that two (or more) excitation quanta at 266 nm are required to ionize DNA. An equimolar mixture of nucleosides shows a much lower quantum yield for electron formation; this is discussed in terms of an exciplex model for the DNA excited state.
© (1987) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Paul A. Cornelius and Daniel K. Negus "Dynamics Of Solvated Electron Formation From Dna Irradiated By Intense Laser Pulses", Proc. SPIE 0712, Lasers in Medicine, (10 March 1987); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.937330
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KEYWORDS
Absorption

Picosecond phenomena

Personal digital assistants

Polymers

Ionization

Medicine

Quantum efficiency

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