Photosensitizing Agents - Sensitizer

Sensitizer

"Sensitizer" redirects here. For the particulate material used to create voids that aid in the initiation or propagation of an explosive's detonation wave, see Explosive sensitiser.

A sensitizer in chemoluminescence is a chemical compound, capable of light emission after it has received energy from a molecule, which became excited previously in the chemical reaction. A good example is this:

When an alkaline solution of sodium hypochlorite and a concentrated solution of hydrogen peroxide are mixed, a reaction occurs:

ClO-(aq) + H2O2(aq) → O2*(g) + H+(aq) + Cl-(aq) + OH-(aq)

O2*is excited oxygen - meaning, one or more electrons in the O2 molecule have been promoted to higher-energy molecular orbitals. Hence, oxygen produced by this chemical reaction somehow 'absorbed' the energy released by the reaction and became excited. This energy state is unstable, therefore it will return to the ground state by lowering its energy. It can do that in more than one way:

  • it can react further, without any light emission
  • it can lose energy without emission, for example, giving off heat to the surroundings or transferring energy to another molecule
  • it can emit light

The intensity, duration and color of emitted light depend on quantum and kinetical factors. However, excited molecules are frequently less capable of light emission in terms of brightness and duration when compared to sensitizers. This is because sensitizers can store energy (that is, be excited) for longer periods of time than other excited molecules. The energy is stored through means of quantum vibration, so sensitizers are usually compounds which either include systems of aromatic rings or many conjugated double and triple bonds in their structure. Hence, if an excited molecule transfers its energy to a sensitizer thus exciting it, longer and easier to quantify light emission is often observed.

The color (that is, the wavelength), brightness and duration of emission depend upon the sensitizer used. Usually, for a certain chemical reaction, many different sensitizers can be used.

Read more about this topic:  Photosensitizing Agents