A method to improve the nonrepetitive acquisition of transient absorption spectra with an intensified charge-coupled device camera

1998 
This article describes in detail a new method of data acquisition using an intensified charge coupled device (CCD) camera coupled with a monochromator as a time-resolved absorption spectrometer. The method is based on a full image transfer taking full advantage of the dynamic range of the CCD. The accumulation of several lines of the matrix is then limited by the 32-bit range of the computer calculation. The absorbance characteristics are a good signal-to-noise ratio and a large linearity domain (absorbances between 0.05 and 0.6) in the visible range (350–700 nm) with temporal gates less than 100 ns. The time-resolved absorption spectra obtained for two transient species in aqueous solution [CO3− and (SCN)2−] are presented and are in good agreement with those considered as reference and obtained with a multistep method with a classical monochromator-photomultiplier device.
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