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The red‐edge effects: 30 years of exploration

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TLDR
Red-edge effects were discovered for electron-transfer and proton-transfer reactions if they depended on the dynamics of the environment and stimulated the emergence and development of cryogenic energy-selective and single-molecular techniques that became valuable tools in their own right in chemistry and biophysics research.
Abstract
In 1970, three laboratories independently made a discovery that, for aromatic fluorophores embedded into different rigid and highly viscous media, the spectroscopic properties do not conform to classical rules. The fluorescence spectra can depend on excitation wavelength, and the excited-state energy transfer, if present, fails at the "red" excitation edge. These red-edge effects were related to the existence of excited-state distribution of fluorophores on their interaction energy with the environment and the slow rate of dielectric relaxation of this environment. In these conditions the site-selection can be provided by variation of the energy of illuminating light quanta, and the behaviour of selected species can be followed as a function of time and other variables. These observations found extensive application in different areas of research: colloid and polymer science, molecular biophysics, photochemistry and photobiology. In particular, they led to the development of very productive methods of studying the dynamics of dielectric relaxations in protein and membranes, using the tryptophan emission and the emission of a variety of probes. These studies were extended to the time domain with the observation of new site-selective effects in emission intensity and anisotropy decays. They stimulated the emergence and development of cryogenic energy-selective and single-molecular techniques that became valuable tools in their own right in chemistry and biophysics research. Site-selection effects were discovered for electron-transfer and proton-transfer reactions if they depended on the dynamics of the environment. This review is focused on the progress in the field of red-edge effects, their applications and prospects.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Excited-state proton coupled charge transfer modulated by molecular structure and media polarization

TL;DR: With knowledge of the mechanisms of these processes, desired rates and directions can be achieved, and thus the multiple emission spectral features can be harnessed.
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Melittin : a membrane-active peptide with diverse functions

TL;DR: The solution and membrane properties ofmelittin are highlighted, with an emphasis on melittin–membrane interaction using biophysical approaches, and the recent applications of melitt in various cellular processes are discussed.
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pH-dependent protein conformational changes in albumin:gold nanoparticle bioconjugates : A spectroscopic study

TL;DR: The studies suggested that albumin in the bioconjugates that was prepared by the common adsorption method underwent substantial conformational changes at both secondary and tertiary structure levels.
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Protein–excipient interactions: Mechanisms and biophysical characterization applied to protein formulation development

TL;DR: Key mechanisms of protein-excipient interactions such as electrostatic and cation-pi interactions, preferential hydration, dispersive forces, and hydrogen bonding are presented in the context of different physical states of the formulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heterogeneity in a room-temperature ionic liquid: persistent local environments and the red-edge effect.

TL;DR: This study investigates the slow dynamics of 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate, a very popular room-temperature ionic solvent and predicts the existence of heterogeneity in the liquid and shows that this heterogeneity is the underlying microscopic cause for the recently reported "red-edge effect" observed in the study of fluorescence of the organic probe 2-amino-7-nitrofluorene.
References
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Book

Principles of fluorescence spectroscopy

TL;DR: This book describes the fundamental aspects of fluorescence, the biochemical applications of this methodology, and the instrumentation used in fluorescence spectroscopy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solvatochromic Dyes as Solvent Polarity Indicators

TL;DR: In this paper, a review compiles positively and negatively solvatochromic compounds which have been used to establish empirical scales of solvent polarity by means of UV/vis/near-IR spectroscopic measurements in solution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical detection and spectroscopy of single molecules in a solid

TL;DR: In this article, the optical absorption spectrum of single dopant molecules of pentacene in a p-terphenyl host crystal at liquid-helium temperatures was observed using two different double-modulation techniques.
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