Chemiluminescence 

A chemoluminescent reaction carried out in an erlenmeyer flask producing a large amount of light.

Chemiluminescence (sometimes "chemoluminescence") is the emission of light (luminescence) with limited emission of heat as the result of a chemical reaction. Given reactants A and B, with an excited intermediate ,

A + BProducts + light

For example, if [A] is luminol and [B] is hydrogen peroxide in the presence of a suitable catalyst we have:

luminol + H2O2 → 3-APA → 3-APA + light

where:

The decay of the excited state to a lower energy level is responsible for the emission of light. In theory, one photon of light should be given off for each molecule of reactant, or Avogadro's number of photons per mole. In actual practice, non-enzymatic reactions seldom exceed 1% QC, quantum efficiency.

A standard example of chemiluminescence in the laboratory setting is found in the luminol test, where evidence of blood is taken when the sample glows upon contact with iron. When chemiluminescence takes place in living organisms, the phenomenon is called bioluminescence. A lightstick emits light by chemiluminescence.

Contents

Liquid-phase reactions

luminol + H2O2 → 3-APA → 3-APA + light
The quantum efficiency, QC is 1%. For the laboratory experiment see references 1,2.
cyalume + H2O2 + dye → phenol + 2CO2 + dye

When the activated fluorescent dye decays to a lower energy level, light is given off. The color depends upon the dye.4.

Color Sensitiser
Blue 9,10-Diphenylanthracene
Green 9,10-Bis(phenylethynyl)anthracene
Yellow-gree Tetracene
Yellow 1-Chloro-9,10-bis(phenylethynyl)anthracene
Orange 5,12-Bis(phenylethynyl)naphthacene, Rubrene, Rhodamine 6G
Red Rhodamine B
2Ru(bipy)32+ + PbO2 + 4H+ → 2Ru(bipy)33+ + Pb2+ + 2H2O
Here, Ru(III) is obtained. Further reaction includes use of solution of sodium tetrahydroborate(III), NaBH4 in alkaline medium. When the solution is added, Ru(III) is reduced to Ru(II) an orange light is emitted.

Gas-phase reactions

A green and blue glowstick.
NO+O3 → NO2+ O2
The activated NO2 luminesces broadband visible to infrared light as it reverts to a lower energy state. A photomultiplier and associated electronics counts the photons which are proportional to the amount of NO present. To determine the amount of nitrogen dioxide, NO2, in a sample (containing no NO) it must first be converted to nitric oxide, NO, by passing the sample through a converter before the above ozone activation reaction is applied. The ozone reaction produces a photon count proportional to NO which is proportional to NO2 before it was converted to NO. In the case of a mixed sample containing both NO and NO2, the above reaction yields the amount of NO and NO2 combined in the air sample, assuming that the sample is passed through the converter. If the mixed sample is not passed through the converter, the ozone reaction produces activated NO2 only in proportion to the NO in the sample. The NO2 in the sample is not activated by the ozone reaction. Though unactivated NO2 is present with the activated NO2, photons are only emitted by the activated species which is proportional to original NO. Final step, subtract NO from (NO + NO2) to yield NO2

Bioluminescence

Main article: Bioluminescence

Chemiluminescence takes place in numerous living organisms, the American firefly being a widely studied case of bioluminescence.

The firefly reaction has the highest known quantum efficiency, QC of 88%, for chemiluminescence reactions. ATP (adenosine tri-phosphate), the ubiquitous biological energy source, reacts with luciferin with the aid of the enzyme luciferase to yield an intermediate complex. This complex combines with oxygen to produce a highly chemiluminescent compound.

ECL

Enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) is a common technique for a variety of detection assays in biology. A horseradish peroxidase enzyme (HRP) is tethered to the molecule of interest (usually through labeling an immunoglobulin that specifically recognizes the molecule). This enzyme complex, then catalyzes the conversion of the ECL substrate into a sensitized reagent in the vicinity of the molecule of interest, which on further oxidation by hydrogen peroxide, produces a triplet (excited) carbonyl which emits light when it decays to the singlet carbonyl. Enhanced chemiluminescence allows detection of minute quantities of a biomolecule. Proteins can be detected down to femtomole quantities (ECL review), well below the detection limit for most assay systems.

Applications

References

  1. ^ a b "Luminol chemistry laboratory demonstration". Retrieved on 2006-03-29.
  2. ^ a b "Investigating lu.inol" (PDF). Salters Advanced Chemistry. Retrieved on 2006-03-29.
  3. ^ a b Rauhut, Michael M. (1985), Chemiluminescence. In Grayson, Martin (Ed) (1985). Kirk-Othmer Concise Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology (3rd ed), pp 247 John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 0-471-51700-3
  4. ^ Helmenstine, Anne Marie (Aug 10, 2004). Light stick chemistry, retrieved Sept. 22, 2004.
  5. ^ For more information about how to perform experiments mentioned, see the reference Bassam Z. Shakhashiri: Chemical Demonstrations, Volume 1, University of Wisconsin 1983.
  6. ^ New light from an old reagent: Chemiluminescence from the reaction of potassium permanganate with sodium borohydride. Neil W. Barnett, Benjamin J. Hindson , Phil Jones, Claire E. Lenehan and Richard A. Russell. Aust. J. Ed. Chem., 2005, 65,