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Photobleaching—a Common Phenomenon

Nature, 1968
YELLOWING or darkening in sunlight is a common occurrence. Ultraviolet light with photon energies in excess of bond energies disrupts molecules and produces coloured and/or reactive groups. Wool yellowing increases below 365 mµ; at 254 mµ greening and free radicals occur1,2. Other materials form free radicals3. Skin reddens only below 320 mµ (ref.
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Kinetic models of photobleaching

1992
The photochemical bleaching of dye by light is a long-standing problem for the textile and graphics industries. However, the effects of photochemical bleaching can also be employed usefully to alter the index of refraction of a material to fabricate an optical waveguide in polymeric materials.
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Challenges and Artifacts in Quantitative Photobleaching Experiments

Traffic, 2004
Confocal fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) is today the prevalent tool when studying the diffusional and kinetic properties of proteins in living cells. Obtaining quantitative data for diffusion coefficients via FRAP, however, is challenged by the fact that both bleaching and scanning take a finite time.
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Reversible Photobleaching of Chlorophyll

The Journal of Physical and Colloid Chemistry, 1948
J J, McBRADY, R, LIVINGSTON
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Coumarin Photocaging Groups Modified with an Electron-Rich Styryl Moiety at the 3-Position: Long-Wavelength Excitation, Rapid Photolysis, and Photobleaching.

Angewandte Chemie, 2018
Qiuning Lin   +8 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Phospha-fluorescein: a red-emissive fluorescein analogue with high photobleaching resistance.

Chemical Communications, 2016
A. Fukazawa   +7 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Photobleaching

2006
DIASPRO, ALBERTO GIOVANNI   +4 more
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