Convergence to $0$ is simple: **Proposition 1.** The following are equivalent: (i) The operator $e^{tQ}$ converges to $0$ with respect to the operator norm as $t \to \infty$. (ii) The spectrum of $Q$ is contained in the open left halfplane $\{\lambda \in \mathbb{C}: \, \operatorname{Re} \lambda < 0\}$. *Sketch of proof.* As mentioned by Pietro Majer in the comments, this follows from the spectral mapping theorem for the operator exponential function, along with the spectral radius formula. $\square$ Convergence to a non-zero operator is a bit more involved. Here are the details: **Theorem 2.** The following are equivalent: (i) The operator $e^{tQ}$ converges with respect to the operator norm to a non-zero operator as $t \to \infty$. (ii) The spectrum of $Q$ is contained in the set $\{\lambda \in \mathbb{C}: \, \operatorname{Re} \lambda < 0\} \cup \{0\}$, and $0$ is an isolated point in the spectrum and a first order pole of the resolvent of $Q$. If the equivalent assertions are satisfied, then the limit $\lim_{t \to \infty} e^{tQ}$ equals the spectral projection of $Q$ associated with the isolated spectral value $0$. *Sketch of proof.* "(i) $\Rightarrow$ (ii)" Let $P$ denote the limit operator; it commutes with $e^{tQ}$ for each $t$. It's easy to check that the range of $P$ consists precisely of the fixed points of the operator semigroup $(e^{tQ})_{t \in [0,\infty)}$ and consequently, we can see that $P$ is a projection. Since the projection commutes with the semigroup, both the range and the kernel of $P$ are invariant under the semigroup. On the kernel of $P$, we have that $e^{tQ}$ converges in operator norm to $0$ as $t \to \infty$, so, according to Proposition 1, the restriction $Q|_{\ker P}$ has spectrum in the open left halfplane. On the other hand, $e^{tQ}$ acts as the identity operator on the range $\operatorname{rg}P$. Since the space $\operatorname{rg}P$ is non-zero, the number $0$ is a spectral value of the restriction $Q|_{\operatorname{rg}P} = 0$, and a first order pole of its resolvent. "(ii) $\Rightarrow$ (i)" Let $P$ denote the spectral projection of $Q$ associated with the isolated spectral value $0$. Since $0$ is a first order pole of the resolvent, it follows that the restriction $Q|_{\operatorname{Rg}P}$ is the $0$ operator, so $e^{tQ}$ acts as the identity operator on $\operatorname{Rg}P$. On the other hand, the restriction $Q|_{\ker P}$ has spectrum in the open left halfplane, so Proposition 1 tells us that $e^{tQ}$ norm converges to $0$ on $\ker P$ as $t \to \infty$. So to sum up, on the whole space we have convergence of $e^{tQ}$ to $P$ as $t \to \infty$. $\square$ **Remarks 3.** (a) In the proof of the implication "(ii) $\Rightarrow$ (i)" we used several results about spectral projections and poles of the resolvents. These results can be found in various classical books about functional analysis; but they are a bit scattered through several books where they are, in my experience, not so easy to digest at first glance. I thus wrote a brief summary about spectral projections and properties of poles of the resolvent, along with detailed references to various books, in the Appendices A.1 - A.3 of my [PhD thesis](http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-4238). (b) Proposition 1 und Theorem 2 can be seen as very elementary special cases of the topic *"long term behaviour of $C_0$-semigroups"*. The point is that, if we replace the bounded operator $Q$ with an unbounded closed operator that generates a so-called *$C_0$-semigroup*, the question whether one has operator norm convergence as $t \to \infty$ becomes suddenly much more involved. (c) The aforementioned topic becomes even subtler if one replaces operator norm convergence with strong convergence. For this topology, even for bounded operators $Q$ the long-term behaviour of $e^{tQ}$ becomes quite non-trivial (and even more so for $C_0$-semigroups with unbounded generators). (d) An introduction to the long-term behaviour of $C_0$-semigroups with many useful theorems can, for instance, be found in Chapter V of the book "Engel and Nagel: One-Parameter Semigroups for Linear Evolution Equations (2000)" ([link to zbMATH](https://zbmath.org/?q=an%3A0952.47036)).