15 research outputs found

    Femtosecond pump/supercontinuum-probe spectroscopy: Optimized setup and signal analysis for single-shot spectral referencing

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    A setup for pump/supercontinuum-probe spectroscopy is described which (i) is optimized to cancel fluctuations of the probe light by single-shot referencing, and (ii) extends the probe range into the near-uv (1000–270 nm). Reflective optics allow 50 Όm spot size in the sample and upon entry into two separate spectrographs. The correlation Îłsame between sample and reference readings of probe light level at every pixel exceeds 0.99, compared to Îłconsec<0.92 reported for consecutive referencing. Statistical analysis provides the confidence interval of the induced optical density, ΔOD. For demonstration we first examine a dye (Hoechst 33258) bound in the minor groove of double-stranded DNA. A weak 1.1 ps spectral oscillation in the fluorescence region, assigned to DNA breathing, is shown to be significant. A second example concerns the weak vibrational structure around t=0 which reflects stimulated Raman processes. With 1% fluctuations of probe power, baseline noise for a transient absorption spectrum becomes 25 ΌOD rms in 1 s at 1 kHz, allowing to record resonance Raman spectra of flavine adenine dinucleotide in the S0 and S1 stateWe are grateful to the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft for support (SFB 450 and Cluster of Excellence “Unifying Concepts in Catalysis”)S

    On the intersystem crossing rate in a Platinum(ii) donor–bridge–acceptor triad

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    The rates of ultrafast intersystem crossing in acceptor–bridge–donor molecules centered on Pt(II) acetylides are investigated. Specifically, a Pt(II) trans-acetylide triad NAP–[triple bond, length as m-dash]–Pt–[triple bond, length as m-dash]–Ph-CH2-PTZ [1], with acceptor 4-ethynyl-N-octyl-1,8-naphthalimide (NAP) and donor phenothiazine (PTZ), is examined in detail. We have previously shown that optical excitation in [1] leads to a manifold of singlet charge-transfer states, S*, which evolve via a triplet charge-transfer manifold into a triplet state 3NAP centered on the acceptor ligand and partly to a charge-separated state 3CSS (NAP−–Pt–PTZ+). A complex cascade of electron transfer processes was observed, but intersystem crossing (ISC) rates were not explicitly resolved due to lack of spin selectivity of most ultrafast spectroscopies. Here we revisit the question of ISC with a combination and complementary analysis of (i) transient absorption, (ii) ultrafast broadband fluorescence upconversion, FLUP, which is only sensitive to emissive states, and (iii) femtosecond stimulated Raman spectroscopy, FSR. Raman resonance conditions allow us to observe S* and 3NAP exclusively by FSR, through vibrations which are pertinent only to these two states. This combination of methods enabled us to extract the intersystem crossing rates that were not previously accessible. Multiple timescales (1.6 ps to ∌20 ps) are associated with the rise of triplet species, which can now be assigned conclusively to multiple ISC pathways from a manifold of hot charge-transfer singlet states. The analysis is consistent with previous transient infrared spectroscopy data. A similar rate of ISC, up to 20 ps, is observed in the trans-acetylide NAP–[triple bond, length as m-dash]–Pt–[triple bond, length as m-dash]–Ph [2] which maintains two acetylide groups across the platinum center but lacks a donor unit, whilst removal of one acetylide group in mono-acetylide NAP–[triple bond, length as m-dash]–Pt–Cl [3] leads to >10-fold deceleration of the intersystem crossing process. Our work provides insight on the intersystem crossing dynamics of the organo-metallic complexes, and identifies a general method based on complementary ultrafast spectroscopies to disentangle complex spin, electronic and vibrational processes following photoexcitation

    Excited-state intramolecular proton transfer in jet-cooled 3-hydroxyflavone. Deuteration studies, vibronic double-resonance experiments, and semiempirical (AM1) calculations of potential-energy surfaces

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    3-Hydroxyflavone (3-HF) and 3-deuteroxyflavone (3-DF) were examd. by fluorescence excitation spectroscopy in a supersonic free jet. Compared to 3-HF, vibronic bands of 3-DF are significantly narrower. Substitution of H by D also appears to split vibronic bands into at least three bands leading to a congested spectrum. Fluorescence-dip double-resonance spectroscopy revealed that the complicated spectrum of 3-DF consists of at least three independent partial spectra which are superimposed. The vibrational pattern of every partial spectrum is identical to that of 3-HF, but partial spectra differ in their spectral position. Semiempirical calcns. (MNDO/AM1 with limited CI) were used to generate ground- and singlet excited-state potential energy surfaces as a function of Ph and hydroxyl torsional angles. The deuteration effects suggest the existence of potential energy barriers to low-frequency hydroxyl hydrogen motion, with barrier height on the order of the vibrational zero-point energy

    Time-resolved photoisomerization of 1,1&prime;-di-tert-butylstilbene and 1,1&prime;-dicyanostilbene.

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    Photoisomerization of 1,1&prime;-di-tert-butylstilbene (3) and 1,1&prime;-dicyanostilbene (4) is monitored with stationary and broadband transient absorption spectroscopy. The electron affinity of the substituents correlates with the shift of the absorption band. The weak extinction of 3 complicates data interpretation, but comparison with earlier measured 1,1&prime;-dimethylstilbene (1) and 1,1&prime;-diethylstilbene (2) helps to assign transient spectra and relaxation paths. For 3 a long-lived perpendicular state P is observed with lifetime &tau;P = 134 ps in acetonitrile. For 4 &tau;P = 2.1 ps in acetonitrile and 27 ps in n-hexane, the difference indicating a substantial dipole moment (&sim;3D) of the P state

    Solvation oscillations and excited-state dynamics of 2-amino- and 2-hydroxy-7-nitrofluorene and its 2'-deoxyriboside

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    Push-pull substituted fluorenes are considered for use as dynamic solvation probes in polynucleotides. Their fluorescence band is predicted (by simulations) to show weak spectral oscillations on the subpicosecond time scale depending on the nucleotide sequence. The oscillations reflect the local far-infrared spectrum of the environment around the probe molecule. A connection is provided by the continuum theory of polar solvation which, however, neglects molecular aspects. We examine the latter using acetonitrile solution as a test case. A collective librational solvent mode at 100 cm-1 is observed with 2-amino-7-nitrofluorene, 2-dimethylamino-7-nitrofluorene, 2-hydroxy-7-nitrofluorene, and its 2'-deoxyriboside. Different strengths of the oscillation indicate that rotational friction of nearby acetonitrile molecules depends on the solute structure or that H bonding is involved in launching the librational coherence. Polar solvation in methanol is used for comparison. With hydroxynitrofluorenes, the observation window is limited by intersystem crossing for which rates are reported. A prominent excited-state absorption band of nitrofluorenes at 430 nm can be used to monitor polar solvation. Structural and electronic relaxation pathways are discussed with the help of quantum chemical calculations

    Photoisomerization dynamics of stiff-stilbene in solution.

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    Photoinduced isomerization of 1,1&prime;-bis-indanyliden (stiff-stilbene) in solution was studied with broadband transient absorption and femtosecond Raman spectroscopies, and by quantum-chemical calculations. Trans-to-cis S 1 isomerization proceeds over a 600 and 400 cm-1 barrier in n-hexane and acetonitrile, respectively. The reaction develops on multiple time scales with fast (0.3-0.4 ps) viscosity-independent and slower (2-26 ps) viscosity-dependent components. In the course of intramolecular torsion (which should be the main reaction coordinate) some excited molecules pass through the perpendicular conformation P and reach the cis geometry, to be temporarily trapped there. Subsequently they relax back to P and further to the ground state S0. The cis-to-trans isomerization reveals ultrafast (0.06 ps) oscillatory relaxation followed by 13 ps decay in n-hexane and 2 ps decay in acetonitrile, corresponding to barriers of 800 and 400 cm-1, respectively. Raman S0 and S1 spectra are reported and discussed. The perpendicular conformation P was not detected, possibly due to its low oscillator strength and short lifetime, or because of strong overlap with hot product spectra. XMCQDPT2 calculations locate a stationary S 1 point on the cis side and two perpendicular-pyramidalized stationary points, to be reached from the former over 300 and 680 cm -1 barrier. Implications for parent stilbene are discussed; in this case we also see evidence for the trans-to-cis adiabatic path, as in stiff-stilbene. Very similar viscosity dependence for the two compounds supports the common isomerization pathway: torsion about the central double bond
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