STARK SPECTROSCOPY: Applications in Chemistry, Biology, and Materials Science
- 1 October 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Physical Chemistry
- Vol. 48 (1), 213-242
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.physchem.48.1.213
Abstract
▪ Abstract Stark spectroscopy has been applied to a wide range of molecular systems and materials. A generally useful method for obtaining electronic and vibrational Stark spectra that does not require sophisticated equipment is described. By working with frozen glasses it is possible to study nearly any molecular system, including ions and proteins. Quantitative analysis of the spectra provides information on the change in dipole moment and polarizability associated with a transition. The change in dipole moment reflects the degree of charge separation for a transition, a quantity of interest to a variety of fields. The polarizability change describes the sensitivity of a transition to an electrostatic field such as that found in a protein or an ordered synthetic material. Applications to donor-acceptor polyenes, transition metal complexes (metal-to-ligand and metal-to-metal mixed valence transitions), and nonphotosynthetic biological systems are reviewed.Keywords
This publication has 82 references indexed in Scilit:
- Structural Changes and Internal Fields in Proteins: A Hole-Burning Stark Effect Study of Horseradish PeroxidaseThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1995
- Higher-Order Stark Spectroscopy: Polarizability of Photosynthetic PigmentsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1995
- Stark effect of one-dimensional Wannier excitons in polydiacetylene single crystalsPhysical Review B, 1992
- Kramers-Krönig relations in nonlinear opticsOptical and Quantum Electronics, 1992
- Contributions of the electrostatic and the dispersion interaction to the solvent shift in a dye-polymer system, as investigated by hole-burning spectroscopyPhysical Review B, 1990
- Electroabsorption of polyacetylenePhysical Review B, 1989
- Vibrational Stark effect of CO on Ni(100), and CO in the aqueous double layer: Experiment, theory, and modelsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1988
- Field-induced vibrational frequency shifts of CO and CN chemisorbed on Cu(100)Physical Review Letters, 1987
- Spectral hole burning in glasses and polymer films: the Stark effectThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1986
- One-Dimensional Wide Energy Bands in a Polydiacetylene Revealed by ElectroreflectancePhysical Review Letters, 1981