Photon Absorption and Orbital Decay Modes
by Thomas Lee Abshier, ND, Copilot, and Poe Assistant
6/24/2024
Thomas: How does a photon transfer energy to a block of carbon? Is it by activating an electron orbital that decays, or by being absorbed by vibrating the associated interatomic bonds, thus storing energy in the vibrating carbon lattice?
Copilot: Great question, Thomas. The answer is that it depends on the photon’s energy and the carbon material’s structure.
Photons can transfer energy to carbon in a few different ways:
- Electronic excitation: If the photon has enough energy (typically in the UV or visible range), it can excite an electron in the carbon atom or molecule to a higher-energy orbital. This is common in materials like graphite or graphene, where delocalized π-electrons can absorb light and jump to higher-energy states. These excited electrons can then relax back down, releasing energy as heat or light or transferring it to other electrons.
- Lattice vibrations (phonons): Lower-energy photons, especially in the infrared range, often don’t have enough energy to excite electrons. Instead, they couple with vibrational modes of the carbon lattice — essentially shaking the bonds between atoms. This increases the thermal energy of the material, which we perceive as heating. These vibrations are quantized as phonons, a key mechanism in how materials absorb and dissipate infrared radiation.
So, both mechanisms are valid — electronic excitation and vibrational absorption — and which one dominates depends on the photon’s energy and the electronic structure of the carbon material in question.
Thomas: How does the orbital electron, going into an excited state, and then relaxing, convert that energy into heat? Is it by vibrating the lattice or causing the atom’s jiggling of other atoms when the orbital electron decays? It seems that the atom is connected with the lattice, and in some way, the activated orbital absorbs the photon energy, and the orbital electron eventually vibrates the lattice.
Copilot: Excellent follow-up, Thomas. When an electron in a carbon atom (or any material) is excited to a higher orbital by absorbing a photon, it doesn’t stay there forever—it wants to relax back to a lower energy state. The way it does that, and how that energy becomes heat, is a fascinating dance of quantum and atomic interactions.
Here’s how the energy gets converted into heat:
- Non-radiative relaxation: Instead of emitting a photon (like in fluorescence), the excited electron can transfer its energy to the surrounding lattice. This happens through interactions with phonons, which are quantized vibrations of the atomic lattice. Essentially, the electron “shakes” the atom it’s bound to, and that motion ripples through the lattice as vibrational energy—aka heat.
- Electron-phonon coupling: This is the key mechanism. The excited electron perturbs the local electric field, which can distort the positions of nearby atoms. That distortion translates into vibrational modes of the lattice. The stronger the coupling, the more efficiently the electronic energy is converted into lattice vibrations.
- Thermalization: Once the energy is in the lattice as vibrations, it spreads out—neighboring atoms jiggle, and the whole material warms up. This is the macroscopic heat we can measure.
So yes, your intuition is spot on: the energy from the excited orbital is ultimately transferred to the vibrational modes of the lattice, either directly or through intermediate steps like internal conversion or vibrational relaxation within the excited state.
Thomas: What do you think of Copilot’s answers?

Thomas: What is the definition of fluorescence and phosphorescence after absorption of a photon by an electron orbital?
Copilot: Fluorescence and phosphorescence are both forms of photoluminescence, meaning they involve the emission of light following the absorption of a photon. But they differ in how the excited electron behaves and how long the glow lasts.
Fluorescence
After a photon excites an electron to a higher energy level (typically from the ground singlet state ( S_0 ) to an excited singlet state ( S_1 )), the electron quickly relaxes back to the ground state, emitting a photon in the process. This happens very rapidly, usually within nanoseconds (10⁻⁹ to 10⁻⁷ seconds). Importantly, the electron does not change its spin state, so the transition is “spin-allowed,” making it fast and efficient.
Phosphorescence
Here, the excited electron undergoes a process called intersystem crossing, where it flips its spin and moves from an excited singlet state to a triplet state ( T_1 ). Returning from this triplet state to the ground singlet state is spin-forbidden, so the electron stays excited much longer—milliseconds to even minutes or hours. When it finally relaxes, it emits a photon, but the glow is delayed and longer-lasting.
In short:
- Fluorescence: fast, spin-allowed, short-lived glow.
- Phosphorescence: slow, spin-forbidden, long-lived glow.
Thomas: what is an excited singlet state and a triplet state?
Copilot: Great question, Thomas — this gets into the quantum mechanics of how electrons behave when they absorb energy.
Excited Singlet State
In a singlet state, all electron spins are paired — meaning for every electron spinning “up,” there’s one spinning “down.” When a molecule absorbs a photon, one of its electrons can jump to a higher energy orbital. If the excited electron retains its spin orientation (still opposite to its paired partner), the molecule remains in a singlet excited state. This is the usual outcome of photon absorption and is the starting point for fluorescence.
Triplet State
A triplet state occurs when the excited electron undergoes a spin flip — now both electrons have parallel spins. This state is lower in energy than the singlet excited state but is spin-forbidden to return directly to the ground state. That’s why transitions from triplet to singlet (like in phosphorescence) are slower and longer-lived.
So in short:
- Singlet excited state: spins are opposite (paired), fast transitions.
- Triplet state: spins are parallel (unpaired), slower transitions due to spin restrictions.
Thomas: What is the mechanism of the electron’s decay from the triplet state to the singlet state?
Copilot: The transition from a triplet state to a singlet state—what we observe as phosphorescence—is a fascinatingly slow and “forbidden” process in quantum mechanics, but nature finds clever ways to make it happen.
Here’s how it works:
- Intersystem Crossing (ISC): First, an electron in an excited singlet state may undergo a spin flip, transitioning into a triplet state. This is already a spin-forbidden process, but it can occur due to spin–orbit coupling, especially in molecules with heavy atoms like iodine or bromine.
- Triplet State Lifetime: Once in the triplet state, the electron is “stuck” because returning to the singlet ground state requires another spin flip—again, spin-forbidden. This is why triplet states are long-lived, often lasting milliseconds to even minutes.
- Phosphorescence (Radiative Decay): Eventually, the electron does decay back to the singlet ground state, emitting a photon in the process. This emission is what we call phosphorescence. The transition is weak because it violates spin selection rules, but it becomes more probable when:
- There’s strong spin–orbit coupling (again, heavy atoms help).
- The vibrational energy levels of the triplet and singlet states overlap, making the transition energetically smoother.
- Non-Radiative Pathways: Sometimes, instead of emitting light, the triplet state can decay non-radiatively—transferring energy to the environment as heat or reacting with other molecules.
So, the decay from triplet to singlet is a slow, spin-forbidden leap, made possible by quantum quirks like spin–orbit coupling and vibrational overlap. That’s why glow-in-the-dark materials keep glowing long after the lights go out.
Thomas: Here’s Copilot’s answers regarding activated electron radiative decay. What do you think?
Assistant
These answers from Copilot are highly accurate and do an excellent job explaining the concepts of fluorescence, phosphorescence, and the mechanisms underlying these processes in terms of quantum mechanics. I would agree with and build upon these explanations to provide additional depth and context where necessary.
1. Fluorescence and Phosphorescence: Overview
Fluorescence
- Definition: Rapid light emission (nanoseconds) as an electron relaxes from S₁ → S₀ after photon absorption.
- Mechanism: Spin-allowed singlet-to-singlet transition; electron retains paired spin.Applications: Used in microscopy, chemical sensing, and biological imaging.
Phosphorescence
- Definition: Slow light emission after electron transitions from T₁ to S₀; can last milliseconds to hours.
- Mechanism: Photon excites electron to S₁, then via spin flip (ISC) to T₁. Spin-forbidden decay from T₁ → S₀ emits light slowly.
- Applications: Used in glow-in-the-dark materials, time-resolved spectroscopy, and optoelectronics.
2. Singlet and Triplet States: Key Differences
- S₁ (Excited Singlet State): Electron spins are paired (anti-parallel); S₁ → S₀ transitions are spin-allowed and fast.
- T₁ (Triplet State): Electron spins are unpaired (parallel); T₁ → S₀ transitions are spin-forbidden and slow.
3. Decay Mechanism: Triplet to Singlet Transition
- T₁ → S₀ decay follows quantum mechanical rules and is spin-forbidden, making it slow and less probable.
a. Spin-Forbidden Transition
- The transition is spin-forbidden because flipping the spin of an electron violates the spin selection rule.
- However, this process can still occur due to spin–orbit coupling.
b. Spin–Orbit Coupling
- Spin–orbit coupling is an interaction between the electron’s spin and its orbital motion around the nucleus.
- In molecules with heavy atoms (e.g., iodine, bromine), spin–orbit coupling becomes stronger because the nucleus has a high atomic number, making the spin-forbidden transition more likely.
c. Vibrational Overlap
- Vibrational overlap between T₁ and S₀ allows the spin-forbidden transition to occur by aiding relaxation.
d. Radiative Decay (Phosphorescence)
- After the spin-forbidden transition, the energy is released as a photon. This is the light we observe as phosphorescence.
e. Non-Radiative Decay
- Instead of emitting a photon, the triplet state can decay via non-radiative pathways:
- Energy transfer to the environment (e.g., heat).
- Quenching by other molecules (e.g., oxygen, which is highly efficient at deactivating triplet states).
4. Additional Insights
a. Why is Phosphorescence Slower?
- T₁ → S₀ is spin-forbidden, so it’s slower than the spin-allowed S₁ → S₀ transition in fluorescence.
- The lifetime of the triplet state depends on:
- Spin–orbit coupling strength: Stronger coupling (e.g., in heavy-atom-containing molecules) increases the likelihood of the transition.
- Environmental factors: Oxygen quenching, collisions, and temperature can affect the triplet lifetime.
b. Comparisons Between Fluorescence and Phosphorescence
Property | Fluorescence | Phosphorescence |
---|---|---|
Lifetime | Nanoseconds to microseconds | Milliseconds to hours |
Transition Type | Spin-allowed | Spin-forbidden |
State Involved |
Singlet: S₁ → S₀ (spin-allowed, fast) |
Triplet: T₁ → S₀ (spin-forbidden, slow) |
Efficiency | High (due to fast transitions) | Low (due to slow transitions) |
c. Practical Examples
- Fluorescence:
- Fluorescent dyes (e.g., fluorescein, rhodamine) used in microscopy.
- Fluorescent proteins (e.g., GFP) in biological imaging.
- Phosphorescence:
- Glow-in-the-dark materials (e.g., phosphorescent paints and toys).
- Persistent luminescence in optical storage and displays.
5. Summary
Definitions:
- Fluorescence: Fast emission; singlet to singlet (S₁ → S₀).
Phosphorescence: Slow emission; triplet to singlet (T₁ → S₀), spin-forbidden. d.
Electron Decay in Phosphorescence:
- The electron decays from the triplet state to the singlet ground state via:
- Spin–orbit coupling, which allows the spin-forbidden transition.
- Vibrational overlap between triplet and singlet states.
- Radiative decay, leading to photon emission (phosphorescence), or non-radiative decay, transferring energy as heat.
Copilot’s explanations are accurate and well-articulated. They provide a clear understanding of the processes while highlighting key quantum mechanical principles like spin selection rules, intersystem crossing, and spin–orbit coupling. 😊

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