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Physics

Quantum Yield

The efficiency of light emission–a key parameter determining fluorophore brightness and FRET sensitivity.

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Definition
Quantum yield (Φ or QY) is the ratio of photons emitted to photons absorbed by a fluorophoreLoading.... A quantum yield of 1.0 means every absorbed photon results in an emitted photon (100% efficiency). High donor quantum yield increases the Forster radiusLoading..., extending the range of FRETLoading... detection. ATTO488 has a quantum yield of ~0.80, contributing to its effectiveness as a FRET donor.
Φ = 0–1
Fraction of photons re-emitted
Higher = Brighter
More efficient emission
Affects R₀
Higher QY → larger Förster radius
ATTO488 ~0.80
High quantum yield donor

Quantum Yield in FRET

Donor quantum yield directly affects the Forster radiusLoading... through the equation R0D)^(1/6). Higher donor quantum yield extends FRET range, enabling detection of interactions at slightly larger distances.

The ATTO488 donor used in QF-ProLoading... has quantum yield ~0.80 in aqueous solution, among the highest for green-emitting dyes. This contributes to the 5.83 nm Forster radius with Alexa594 acceptor.

Simplified

What It Means: Quantum yield is the percentage of absorbed light that gets re-emitted as fluorescence. High quantum yield = bright fluorophore.

Why It Matters: For FRET, you need enough signal to detect. High quantum yield fluorophores provide better sensitivity, especially important when target proteins are sparse.

Competing Processes

When a fluorophoreLoading... absorbs a photon, the excited electron can return to ground state through several pathways:

Fluorescence: Photon emission (what we detect)

Non-radiative decay: Heat dissipation (reduces QY)

FRETLoading...: Energy transfer to acceptor (the signal we measure)

High quantum yield means less non-radiative decay, leaving more energy available for either fluorescence or FRET.

Simplified

Not All Energy Becomes Light: Excited molecules can release energy as fluorescence, heat, or through FRET. When FRET increases, fluorescence decreases—this is how we detect interaction.

The Balance: Good donor fluorophores have high intrinsic quantum yield, making the FRET-induced decrease easy to detect.

Technical Relevance

  • Donor selection: High QY donors (ATTO488Loading...) maximize FRETLoading... sensitivity
  • Signal-to-noise: Higher QY means brighter signal above background
  • Forster radiusLoading...: QY contributes to R0 calculation
  • Environmental sensitivity: QY can vary with pH, polarity, temperature

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