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Terre Trupp's JCE
Classroom Activity #36
in the May 2001 issue of J. Chem. Educ.
(1) provides a nice visual demonstration of steady-state
photochemical kinetics. In Part II of the activity,
UV-sensitive beads at different temperatures are
exposed to the same amount of light. It is
observed that the intensity of the color varies
inversely with temperature--less of the colored form of
the photochromic dye is formed at higher temperatures. This is just what is expected if the rate of formation of the colored form is independent of temperature and the rate of thermal return to the colorless form increases with temperature.
The rate of formation of the colored form is
dC/dt = (aI0f)L (1)
Here C and L are the concentrations of
the Colored and colorLess forms of the dye,
I0 is the flux of photons,
a is the fraction of photons absorbed by a unit concentration of the dye
in the bead, and f is the quantum yield for formation of the colored form of a photo-excited dye molecule. The factors inside the parentheses are essentially independent of temperature over the short range of interest for these beads.
The rate of loss of the colored form by thermal return to the colorless form is
-dC/dt = kC (2)
Here k is the temperature-dependent (via
the Arrhenius activation energy factor) rate
constant for the thermal return. The activation energy
for the thermal return can be obtained by exposing flattened, room-temperature beads to the
same light source for a specified time and then
placing them on metal surfaces at different
temperatures and noting the time required to return to
the colorless form. The times range from 120 to 20 seconds over the range from 0 to 40 °C
(private communication with Silberman, R.; Radcliffe,
K. SUNY-Cortland, Jul 2000). The activation energy derived from these measurements
is about 37 kJ mol-1.
When the rates (eqs 1 and 2) are equal, the steady state,
the ratio of the colored to colorless forms of the dye in the bead is
C/L = aI0f/k (3)
Since k increases with temperature (the
thermal return times get shorter), the steady-state
ratio decreases with temperature. The intensity of color developed is lower at higher
temperatures, which provides a visual
demonstration of the steady-state kinetics. A further
experiment would be to change the flux of photons (brightness of the light source) to test
whether the steady-state color intensity is a function
of this variable, as eq 3 predicts.
In an article that accompanies the Classroom Activity, Prypsztejn and Negri outline a
photochromic experiment with a spiropyran dye
(2). In ethanol solution, they find a large
temperature dependence for the thermal decay with
an activation energy of 112 kJ mol-1. The
decay time for their dye is strongly dependent on solvent effects and decreases dramatically
in less polar solvents. If the dye(s) in the UV-sensitive beads are similar to these spiro
dyes, we can infer that their environment in the beads is relatively nonpolar.
Literature Cited
- Trupp, T. J. Chem. Educ. 2001, 78, 648A-648B.
- Prypsztejn, H. E.; Negri, R. M. J. Chem. Educ. 2001, 78, 645-648.
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