Abstract
The surprisingly small effect of oxygen on photoelectron transfer in pigmented lipid bilayers is traced to a short lifetime of the excited states. Decreasing the oxygen concentration by greater than 100-fold decreases the half saturating concentration of acceptor by only threefold and has no effect on the maximum photovoltage observed at acceptor saturation. This holds true for both magnesium octaethylporphyrin and chlorophyll with both ferricyanide and methyl viologen as acceptors. Since oxygen quenches excited states at near the encounter limit, the lifetime of reactive state must be short, less than 100 ns. About 100-fold higher concentrations of acceptor are required to quench the fluorescence (in liposomes) than to saturate the photoeffect. Thus the reactive state is most likely the triplet. The short life of the excited state is caused by concentration quenching, i.e., their reaction with ground state molecules. The increase of photovoltage with increasing pigment concentration shows that this quenching in a condensed form of the pigment produces ions that lead to the observed photovoltage by interfacial reaction of the anion with acceptor.
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