Say you have a molecule (call it S
1), when excited it will become S
1*
Now S1* can return to its ground state in various ways:
Florescence (k
f) Rate
f=k
f[S
1*]
Interal-system-crossing (k
isc) Rate
isc=k
isc[S
1*]
Interal conversion (k
ic) Rate
ic=k
ic[S
1*]
Quenching (k
q) Rate
q=k
q[Q][S
1*]
Fluorescence is where the molecule in the excited state loses energy by a photon and thus returns to its ground state.
Internal conversion is where the gained energy of the S1* is crossed into vibrational energy (more vib levels become available)
Intersystem crossing causes the formation of triplet states T
1Quenching involves the removal of these triplet states usually by collision with a second molecule (quencher - Q). It is a slow process.
These processes are all unimolecular except for quenching (a bimolecular process) which relays on collisions of molecules. As temperature decreases, less molecules are quenched therefore more will fluoresce than will be quenched.
I hope this explained it
.