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Triplet-Triplet Absorption Spectra | ![]() |
Enter a name for the molecule excited to its triplet state. This search is only for the compilation of "Triplet-Triplet Absorption Spectra of Organic Molecules in Condensed Phases" not for general solution kinetics.
Wild card characters (*, % and _) are allowed in the name. Names of molecules that match the request, as excited triplet states, will be listed on a page with the name as a link to the pages containing the data. The number or results shown is limited to the first 600 matches which may be used as a guide for a more specific search.
Particular substances may be identified by any name that is in our database. Each is represented by at least one name, the name used in the compilation and often more than one name. There is usually at least one systematic name which may also be inverted to bring one or more functional groups to the beginning of the name. Common names and often used abbreviations are also often included. Each name matching the request will be returned thus one molecule may be returned more than once.
Molecular formula have also been added as synonyms and may be searched without subscript or superscript indicators. These are entered carbon first followed by hydrogen followed by other elements in alphabetic order. Charge, + or -, is last if present followed by its numeric value if not 1. Examples: C6H6 (Benzene), C11H7O2- 1-Naphthoate ion or 2-Naphthoate ion, etc.)
Capitalization is important as are numbers, italicized and other special parts. The names are entered into the database using the encoding scheme that has been used by the Radiation Chemistry Data Center for some years. Examples of names used are:
. [technical note: * will be converted to % as the character representing any number of any characters in an SQL search, _ represents a single occurrence of any character. The actual search will be executed by an Oracle DBMS. If one of the three wild card characters is present, the search requirement will use the term LIKE otherwise the operator will be = which requires an exact match.] The search should be faster if the first few characters are not wild card characters, however several characters as a fragment of a name starting and ending with * or % may be used. e.g. Benzo*, %quinone% or _-Chloronaphthalene
E-mail: ndrlrcdc.1@nd.edu
Author: W.P.Helman
Last Modified: 13 May 1998