BMS 631: Lecture 3: Light and Fluorescence
BMS 631: Lecture 3: Light and Fluorescence
Purdue University
www.cyto.purdue.edu
2002 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University
Absorption
Basic quantum mechanics requires that molecules absorb energy as quanta (photons) based upon a criteria specific for each molecular structure Absorption of a photon raises the molecule from ground state to an excited state Total energy is the sum of all components (electronic, vibrational, rotational, translations, spin orientation energies) (vibrational energies are quite small) The structure of the molecule dictates the likely-hood of absorption of energy to raise the energy state to an excited one
3rd Ed Shapiro p 84
2002 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University
Lifetime
Absorption associated with electronic transitions (electrons changing states) occurs in about 1 femptosecond (10-15 s) The lifetime of a molecule depends on how the molecule disposes of the extra energy Because of the uncertainty principle, the more rapidly the energy is changing, the less precisely we can define the energy So, long-lifetime-excited-states have narrow absorption peaks, and short-lifetime-excited-states have broad absorption peaks
3rd Ed.Shapiro p 85
2002 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University
Exctinction
Using Beers law (Beer-Lambert law) for light travelling through a curvette thickness d cm containing n molecules/cm3
where Io and I are the light entering and leaving and is the molecular property called the absorption cross section
ln (Io/I) = nd
If there are n (molecules/cm3 ; d in cm, must be in cm2 so if is in cm2/mol, C must be in mol/cm3 do C=a/103 giving
log10 (Io/I) = d = A where A is the absorbance or optical density and is the decadic molar exctinction coeficient in dm3mol-1cm-1
Absorbance
O.D. units or absorbance is expressed in logarithmic terms so they are additive. E.g. an object of O.D. of 1.0 absorbs 90% of the light. Another object of O.D. 1.0 placed in the path of the 10% of the light 10% of this light or 1% of the original light is transmitted by the second object It is posssible to express the absorbance of a mixture of substances at a particular wavelength as the sum of the absorbances of the components You can calculate the cross sectional area of a molecule to determine how efficient it will absorb photons. The extinction coefficient indicates this value
Parameters
Extinction Coefficient
refers to a single wavelength (usually the absorption maximum)
Quantum Yield
Qf
is a measure of the integrated photon emission over the fluorophore spectral band
Fluorescence
Quantum Yield
Q=
kr kr + knr
1 = k +k r nr
Fluorescence
Photon emission as an electron returns from an excited state to ground state
Fluorescence
Excitation Spectrum
Intensity of emission as a function of exciting wavelength
Chromophores are components of molecules which absorb light They are generally aromatic rings
Fluorescence
The wavelength of absorption is related to the size of the chromophores Smaller chromophores, higher energy (shorter wavelength)
Fluorescence
Stokes Shift
is the energy difference between the lowest energy peak of absorbance and the highest energy of emission
Fluorescnece Intensity
Fluorescein molecule Stokes Shift is 25 nm 495 nm 520 nm
Wavelength
2002 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University
Fluorescence
The longer the wavelength the lower the energy The shorter the wavelength the higher the energy
eg. UV light from sun - this causes the sunburn, not the red visible light
Electromagnetic Spectrum
Only a very small region within the ES is used for flow cytometry applications
2002 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University
S1
hvex
hvem
S0
Fluorescence
Jablonski Diagram
Singlet States Triplet States
Vibrational energy levels Rotational energy levels Electronic energy levels
S2
T2
ENERGY
S1
ABS FL
IsC
T1
I.C.
PH IsC
S0
[Vibrational sublevels]
ABS - Absorbance S 0.1.2 - Singlet Electronic Energy Levels FL - Fluorescence T 1,2 - Corresponding Triplet States I.C.- Nonradiative Internal Conversion IsC - Intersystem Crossing PH - Phosphorescence
Fluorescence
The longer the wavelength the lower the energy
The shorter the wavelength the higher the energy eg. UV light from sun causes the sunburn not the red visible light
Wavelength
the energy of the light absorbed or emitted
Conclusions
Dye molecules must be close to but below saturation levels for optimum emission Fluorescence emission is longer than the exciting wavelength The energy of the light increases with reduction of wavelength
Allophycocyanin (APC)
Protein
300 nm 400 nm 500 nm 600 nm
632.5 nm (HeNe)
700 nm
Excitation
Emisson
350
300 nm
610 632
600 nm 700 nm
PI
Ethidium PE FITC cis-Parinaric acid
Excitation Saturation The rate of emission is dependent upon the time the molecule remains
within the excitation state (the excited state lifetime f) Optical saturation occurs when the rate of excitation exceeds the reciprocal of f In a scanned image of 512 x 768 pixels (400,000 pixels) if scanned in 1 second requires a dwell time per pixel of 2 x 10-6 sec. Molecules that remain in the excitation beam for extended periods have higher probability of interstate crossings and thus phosphorescence Usually, increasing dye concentration can be the most effective means of increasing signal when energy is not the limiting factor (i.e. laser based confocal systems)
Phosphorescence
Following absorption, molecules can relax via a non-radiative transition to the T1 rather than the S1 state - this is called an intersystem crossing, While it is forbidden it does happen and has a low probability and takes a longer time - the energy dissipated is called phosphorescence Phosphorescence has a longer lifetime than fluorescence (milliseconds rather than femptoseconds Phosphorescence generally occurs at longer wavelengths than fluorescence because the energy difference between S0 and T1 is lower
Shapiro p 88
2002 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University
Shapiro p 90
2002 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University
Fluorescence
Resonance Energy Transfer
Molecule 1
Fluorescence
DONOR ACCEPTOR
Molecule 2
Fluorescence
Absorbance Absorbance
Wavelength
2002 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University
Raman Scatter
A molecule may undergo a vibrational transition (not an electronic shift) at exactly the same time as scattering occurs This results in a photon emission of a photon differing in energy from the energy of the incident photon by the amount of the above energy - this is Raman scattering. The dominant effect in flow cytometry is the stretch of the O-H bonds of water. At 488 nm excitation this would give emission at 575-595 nm
Shapiro p 93
2002 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University
Shapiro p 90
2002 J.Paul Robinson, Purdue University
Lecture Summary
Light and Matter Absorption Fluorescence
From this lecture you should understand:
The nature of fluorescence molecules How fluorescence is generated Why molecules have different excitation and emission What Resonance Energy Transfer is What quantum yield is