Title: Daresbury Laboratory, Warrington, WA4 4AD, UK
1The Free Radical Research Facility at Daresbury
Laboratory (FRRF_at_Daresbury)
R Edge1,2, DJ Holder3 and S Navaratnam1,4 1.
FRRF_at_Daresbury. 2. North East Wales Institute. 3.
ASTeC, Daresbury Laboratory. 4. University of
Salford.
Introduction
- Laser flash photolysis - NdYAG laser - 15ns
266nm, 355nm and 532nm pulses, up to 500mJ. - Time-resolved resonance Raman spectroscopy (TR3)
- pulsed laser system synchronised with either
linac pulses or NdYAG laser pulses. - Confocal microscopy - Pulsed titanium sapphire
laser - maximum scan speed of 1 frame/second. - Time-resolved detection systems - optical
absorption and emission, conductivity, resonance
Raman at variable temperatures (77K - 350K). - Single wavelength and multiple wavelength
detection systems. - Facility available for up to two 11 hour
sessions per day. - Fully staffed for complete service.
- Fully equipped support laboratories.
- EU funding provides access to users from the
European - Union and Associated states (see website).
This is a new facility at Daresbury Laboratory,
comprising of the complementary techniques of
pulse radiolysis, laser flash photolysis, ESR,
Confocal microscopy, time-resolved resonance
Raman spectroscopy, time-resolved luminescence
spectroscopy to study free radicals and excited
states of biologically important molecules.
Free radicals
- In biology, free radicals are frequently
implicated in disease - In motor neurone disease, for example, a mutant
form of the enzyme superoxide dismutase, which
normally protects against free radical damage,
becomes a potent source of damaging hydroxyl
radicals. - In heart disease (atherosclerosis), free
radicals lead to the oxidation of fats in the
blood and hence to the formation of
artery-blocking plaques. - Protection is available from natural
antioxidants, such as vitamins E and C,
flavonoids and carotenoids, which intercept
damaging free radicals. -
- In chemistry, the damaging effects of free
radicals are experienced by the nuclear industry.
Ionising radiation produces free radicals which - Degrade polymers,
- Decompose solvents (including aqueous systems)
- Not all free radicals are bad news however, as
some may also be beneficial - Radiotherapy induces free radicals which destroy
cancerous cells. - Blood pressure is regulated by the action of
nitric oxide, a relatively long-lived free
radical. - Photosynthesis involves free radicals.
- Some drugs exert their effects by free-radical
mechanisms.
The Facility
- Pulse radiolysis - 12 MeV electron linac
provides single or multiple (up to 10 Hz) pulses
of electrons. - Fully-calibrated digital control of pulse length
in the range 220ns to 2.2µs - doses up to 20
Grays per shot.
Current Research Areas
- Bioactivation,
- Pigmentation,
- Cuticle sclerotization,
- Organic synthesis,
- Free radicals in enzymatic processes,
- Photochemistry of amino acids and proteins,
- Structural studies of thiols,
- Luminescent polymers,
- Photonic bandgap crystals,
- Mimics of copper-containing enzymes,
- Antioxidants in cancer therapy,
- Dye photophysics and photochemistry,
- Fullerenes,
- Photodynamic therapy (PDT),
- Photochemistry of drugs,
- Nitric oxide reactivity.
The pulse radiolysis line in the SRS Linac Hall
at Daresbury.