2 research outputs found
Development of Two-Dimensional Electronic-Vibrational Sum Frequency Generation (2D-EVSFG) for Vibronic and Solvent Couplings of Molecules at Interfaces and Surfaces
Many photoinduced
excited states’ relaxation processes and
chemical reactions occur at interfaces and surfaces, including charge
transfer, energy transfer, proton transfer, proton-coupled electron
transfer, configurational dynamics, conical intersections, etc. Of
them, interactions of electronic and vibrational motions, namely,
vibronic couplings, are the main determining factors for the relaxation
processes or reaction pathways. However, time-resolved electronic-vibrational
spectroscopy for interfaces and surfaces is lacking. Here we develop
interface/surface-specific two-dimensional electronic-vibrational
sum frequency generation spectroscopy (2D-EVSFG) for time-dependent
vibronic coupling of excited states at interfaces and surfaces. We
further demonstrate the fourth-order technique by investigating vibronic
coupling, solvent correlation, and time evolution of the coupling
for photoexcited interface-active molecules, crystal violet (CV),
at the air/water interface as an example. The two vibronic absorption
peaks for CV molecules at the interface from the 2D-EVSFG experiments
were found to be more prominent than their counterparts in bulk from
2D-EV. Quantitative analysis of the vibronic peaks in 2D-EVSFG suggested
that a non-Condon process participates in the photoexcitation of CV
at the interface. We further reveal vibrational solvent coupling for
the zeroth level on the electronic state with respect to that on the
ground state, which is directly related to the magnitude of its change
in solvent reorganization energy. The change in the solvent reorganization
energy at the interface is much smaller than that in bulk methanol.
Time-dependent center line slopes (CLSs) of 2D-EVSFG also showed that
kinetic behaviors of CV at the air/water interface are significantly
different from those in bulk methanol. Our ultrafast 2D-EVSFG experiments
not only offer vibrational information on both excited states and
the ground state as compared with the traditional doubly resonant
sum frequency generation and electronic-vibrational coupling but also
provide vibronic coupling, dynamical solvent effects, and time evolution
of vibronic coupling at interfaces
Orientational Coupling of Molecules at Interfaces Revealed by Two-Dimensional Electronic–Vibrational Sum Frequency Generation (2D-EVSFG)
Photoinduced relaxation
processes at interfaces are intimately
related to many fields such as solar energy conversion, photocatalysis,
and photosynthesis. Vibronic coupling plays a key role in the fundamental
steps of the interface-related photoinduced relaxation processes.
Vibronic coupling at interfaces is expected to be different from that
in bulk due to the unique environment. However, vibronic coupling
at interfaces has not been well understood due to the lack of experimental
tools. We have recently developed a two-dimensional electronic–vibrational
sum frequency generation (2D-EVSFG) for vibronic coupling at interfaces.
In this work, we present orientational correlations in vibronic couplings
of electronic and vibrational transition dipoles as well as the structural
evolution of photoinduced excited states of molecules at interfaces
with the 2D-EVSFG technique. We used malachite green molecules at
the air/water interface as an example, to be compared with those in
bulk revealed by 2D-EV. Together with polarized VSFG and ESHG experiments,
polarized 2D-EVSFG spectra were used to extract relative orientations
of an electronic transition dipole and vibrational transition dipoles
at the interface. Combined with molecular dynamics calculations, time-dependent
2D-EVSFG data have demonstrated that structural evolutions of photoinduced
excited states at the interface have different behaviors than those
in bulk. Our results showed that photoexcitation leads to intramolecular
charge transfer but no conical interactions in 25 ps. Restricted environment
and orientational orderings of molecules at the interface are responsible
for the unique features of vibronic coupling