R.D. Miller, D.M. Burland, et al.
Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals Science and Technology Section B: Nonlinear Optics
The growth of a hologram can be used to follow the temporal course of a photochemical reaction. In this paper the application of this technique to reactions involving more than one photochemical step is considered. A theoretical framework is developed by which the hologram growth curves can be predicted provided one knows the appropriate kinetic equations. Three different kinetic schemes are explicitly considered: a one-step reaction, two parallel reactions, and a two-step consecutive reaction scheme. The calculations are compared with experimental results obtained for the reaction of benzophenone in polymethylmethacrylate. © 1982 American Institute of Physics.
R.D. Miller, D.M. Burland, et al.
Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals Science and Technology Section B: Nonlinear Optics
D.M. Burland, F. Carmona, et al.
Chemical Physics Letters
W.E. Moerner, C.P. Walsh, et al.
SPIE San Diego 1991
T. Verbiest, D.M. Burland, et al.
Science