Shining Light on the Math: A Guide to Quantum Yield and Lifetime

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Shining Light on the Math: Quantum Yield & Fluorescence Lifetime Guide

In photophysics, Quantum Yield (Φ) and Fluorescence Lifetime (τ) are foundational parameters. They reveal both the efficiency of light emission and the dynamics of the excited state—crucial for fluorophores, quantum dots, sensors, and photovoltaics.

1. Quantum Yield (Φ)

Φ is the fraction of absorbed photons that are re-emitted as fluorescence:

$$\Phi = \frac{\text{photons emitted}}{\text{photons absorbed}}$$

Φ = 0.80 means 80% of absorbed photons produce fluorescence; the rest are lost to non-radiative processes (heat, vibrations, etc.).

Relative Method (Common Lab Practice)

$$\Phi_{\text{sample}} = \Phi_{\text{ref}} \left( \frac{I_{\text{sample}}/A_{\text{sample}}}{I_{\text{ref}}/A_{\text{ref}}} \right) \left( \frac{n_{\text{sample}}^2}{n_{\text{ref}}^2} \right)$$

(I = integrated fluorescence intensity, A = absorbance at excitation wavelength, n = refractive index. Use optical density correction 1–10–A for accuracy if OD > ~0.05.)

2. Fluorescence Lifetime (τ)

τ is the average time a molecule remains in the excited state before decaying to the ground state — typically 0.5–10 ns for organic fluorophores.

3. Connecting the Dots: Decay Rates

Two main pathways compete:

  • Radiative decay (fluorescence): rate constant kr
  • Non-radiative decay: rate constant knr (internal conversion, intersystem crossing, quenching, etc.)
$$\tau = \frac{1}{k_r + k_{nr}}$$
$$\Phi = \frac{k_r}{k_r + k_{nr}}$$

Combining these yields the most powerful relationship:

$$\Phi = k_r \cdot \tau$$

Interactive Calculator: kr & knr from Φ and τ

Calculate Radiative & Non-Radiative Rates

Typical range: 0.1 – 0.95 for good emitters
Common range: 1–10 ns
Fills fields with realistic literature values
Enter Φ and τ above (or choose preset) → see kr, knr, total rate.

Summary Table

MetricSymbolDefinitionTypical Units / Range
Quantum YieldΦPhotons emitted / absorbed0 – 1
LifetimeτAverage excited-state durationnanoseconds (ns)
Radiative RatekrRate of photon emission10⁷ – 10⁹ s⁻¹ (often 10–1000 × 10⁶ s⁻¹)
Non-Radiative RateknrRate of non-emissive decays⁻¹ (varies widely)

Got your own Φ and τ data? Paste values or ask for interpretation — happy to help derive quenching mechanisms or compare to literature!

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