Abstract

The lifetime of the photoexcited state of the hydrated electron in liquid water at room temperature is shown to be less than 6 × 10−12 sec following photoexcitation at 694 nm, a wavelength very close to λmax. This has implications concerning the nature of the optical transition involved and may suggest that the absorption band is a photoionisation efficiency profile rather than an electronic transition to a bound excited state. The absorbance of hydrated electrons (produced by uv flash photolysis) was measured at very high light fluxes using a Q-switched ruby laser under conditions where cryptocyanine and methylene blue solutions showed marked nonlinear absorption due to saturation of optical transitions. Whereas the dye solutions showed diminished absorbance and a shortening of the laser pulse at high light intensities, hydrated electrons gave identical absorbance at all intensities, varied over 7 orders of magnitude, up to 200 photons per hydrated electron per cm2 of the light beam.

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