2 research outputs found

    Gas-Phase Photoluminescence and Photodissociation of Silver-Capped Hexagold Clusters

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    We report on the radiative and nonradiative deactivation pathways of selected charge states of the stoichiometric hexagold phosphine-stabilized ionic clusters, [(C)­(AuDppy)<sub>6</sub>Ag<sub>2</sub>·(BF<sub>4</sub>)<sub><i>x</i></sub>]<sup>(4–<i>x</i>)+</sup> with <i>x</i> = 2 and 3 (Dppy = diphenylphosphino-2-pyridine), combining gas-phase photoluminescence and photodissociation with quantum chemical computations. These clusters possess an identical isostructural core made of a hyper-coordinated carbon at their center octahedrally surrounded by six gold ions, and two silver ions at their apexes. Their luminescence and fragmentation behavior upon photoexcitation was investigated under mass and charge control in an ion trap. The experimental and computational results shed light on the electronic states involved in the optical transitions as well as on their core, ligand, or charge transfer character. Gas-phase results are discussed in relation with condensed phase measurements, as well as previous observations in solution and on metal–organic frameworks. The monocationic species (<i>x</i> = 3) is found to be less stable than the dicationic one (<i>x</i> = 2). In the luminescence spectrum of the monocationic species, a shoulder at short wavelength can be observed and is assigned to fragment emission. This fragment formation appears to be favored for the monocation by the existence of a low lying singlet state energetically overlapping with the triplet state manifold, which is populated quickly after photoexcitation

    Few-Femtosecond C<sub>2</sub>H<sub>4</sub><sup>+</sup> Internal Relaxation Dynamics Accessed by Selective Excitation

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    Dissociation of the ethylene cation is a prototypical multistep pathway in which the exact mechanisms leading to internal energy conversions are not fully known. For example, it is still unclear how the energy is exactly redistributed among the internal modes and which step is rate-determining. Here we use few-femtosecond extreme-ultraviolet pulses of tunable energy to excite a different superposition of the four lowest states of C2H4+ and probe the subsequent fast relaxation with a short infrared pulse. Our results demonstrate that the infrared pulse photoexcites the cationic ground state (GS) to higher excited states, producing a hot GS upon relaxation, which enhances the fragmentation yield. As the photoexcitation probability of the GS strongly depends on the molecular geometry, the probing by the IR pulse provides information about the ultrafast excited-state dynamics and the type of conical intersection (planar or twisted) involved in the first 20 fs of the nonradiative relaxation
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