From my experience and MrHomeScientist's thread on terbium tetrakis(dibenzoylmethide)triethylammonium, it appears that terbium is a difficult to get
to fluoresce properly without the proper organic chromophore ligand. These sites have a lot of information about lanthanide fluorescence.
I also need to figure out the spectrum of the UV lamp I used. The sites I looked at show that the lanthanides fluoresce at wavelenghts from 340 nm 254
nm. I'll try making terbium chloride and hexakis(antipyrine)terbium chloride to see if there's a significant difference in the fluorescence,
especially from different sources. This may explain why the double sulfate fluoresces under only the UV tube lamp. (I used 3 sources for my
experiments: a UV LED, a tube lamp, and a UV compact fluorescent lamp.)
In the compounds europium (tetrakis)dibenzoylmethide triethylammonium and hexakis(antipyrine)terbium iodide, the dibenzoylmethane and antipyrine
ligands appear to be the chromophores that the lanthanide luminescence site discusses. |