27 research outputs found

    Linear, Non-Conjugated Cyclic and Conjugated Cyclic Paraphenylene under Pressure

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    The n-paraphenylene family comprises chains of phenylene units linked together by C-C bonds that are between single- and double-bonded, and where n corresponds to the number of phenylene units. In this work, we compare the response of the optical properties of different phenylene arrangements. We study linear chains (LPP), cyclic systems (CPPs), and non-conjugated cyclic systems with two hydrogenated phenylenes (H4[n]CPP). Particularly, the systems of interest in this work are [6]LPP, [12]- and [6]CPP and H4[6]CPP. This work combines Raman and infrared spectroscopies with absorption and fluorescence (one- and two-photon excitations) measured as a function of pressure up to maximum of about 25 GPa. Unprecedented crystallographic pressure-dependent results are shown on H4[n]CPP, revealing intramolecular ¿-¿ interactions upon compression. These intramolecular interactions justify the H4[n]CPP singular optical properties with increasing fluorescence lifetime as a function of pressure

    Réactivité chimique de composés moléculaires sous l'effet de très haute pression et de la radiation laser

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    PARIS-BIUSJ-Thèses (751052125) / SudocPARIS-BIUSJ-Physique recherche (751052113) / SudocSudocFranceF

    High-Pressure Optical Properties and Chemical Stability of Picene

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    Picene is a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon belonging to the class of phenacenes which have been recently found to behave as high-temperature superconductors upon alkali metal doping. The electronic properties of organic crystals can be finely and largely modified by the density changes obtained by the application of an external pressure. In this work, the role of pressure in tuning the optical properties of crystalline picene has been investigated from room conditions up to 15 GPa through the measurement of UV-visible absorption spectra, two-photon excitation profiles, and one- and two-photon excited fluorescence spectra in a diamond anvil cell. The pressure dependence of the optical band gap was determined, and the frequencies of several vibronic bands belonging to electronic transitions from the ground state (S0) to the four lowest-energy excited singlet states (S1 to S4) were determined as a function of pressure. We evidence a very different density dependence of the transition energy of S0 → S1, which undergoes a remarkable red shift of ∼400 cm-1/GPa, and of the transitions from S0 to the higher excited states, which remain constant in the whole investigated range. This is consistent with a S 1 state of 1La character in solid picene. The high-pressure chemical stability of solid picene was investigated through visible absorption and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). A chemical transformation involving the bulk picene crystal occurs above ∼23 GPa, giving rise to a disordered material similar to the amorphous hydrogenated carbon obtained in the pressure-induced reactivity of benzene. The combination of electronic and vibrational data allows us to identify the presence of reaction intermediates at ∼10 GPa, preferentially forming at crystal defects. © 2013 American Chemical Society

    Superheating and Homogeneous Melting Dynamics of Bulk Ice

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    Homogeneous melting of crystals is a complex multistep process involving the formation of transient states at temperatures considerably higher than the melting point. The nature and persistence of these metastable structures are intimately connected to the melting process, and a precise definition of the temporal boundaries of these phenomena is not yet available. We set up a specifically designed experiment to probe by transient infrared absorption spectroscopy the entire dynamics, ranging from tens of picoseconds to microseconds, of superheating and melting of an ice crystal. In spite of a large excess of energy provided, only about 30% of the micrometric crystal liquefies in the first 20-25 ns because of the long persistence of the superheated metastable phase that extends for more than 100 ns. This behavior is ascribed to the population of low-energy states that trap a large amount of energy, favoring the formation of a metastable, likely plastic, ice phase

    HOMO-LUMO transitions in solvated and crystalline picene

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    The optical properties of picene at ambient conditions have been investigated through the measurement of UV/Vis absorption and fluorescence spectra and of excitation profiles, using one-and two-photon excitation, in solution and in the crystal phase. For solvated picene an assignment of the vibronic structure of the transitions to the four lowest-energy excited singlet states (S-1-S-4) has been obtained from the absorption data, and the vibronic structure of the fluorescence spectra has been assigned. The absorption and fluorescence spectra of the solid phase can be interpreted according to the single molecule analysis. Nevertheless, the strong increase of the optical density in the spectral region of the lowest HOMO-LUMO transitions and the frequency shift of absorption and fluorescence bands may be explained by a mixing of the states of adjacent molecules in the crystal. Moreover, peculiar emission features depending on the crystal dimensions (10(-1) to 10(2) mu m) are observed. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4770265

    Pressure Dependence of Hydrogen-Bond Dynamics in Liquid Water Probed by Ultrafast Infrared Spectroscopy

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    Clarifying the structure/dynamics relation of water hydrogen-bond network has been the aim of extensive research over many decades. By joining anvil cell high-pressure technology, femtosecond 2D infrared spectroscopy, and molecular dynamics simulations, we studied, for the first time, the spectral diffusion of the stretching frequency of an HOD impurity in liquid water as a function of pressure. Our experimental and simulation results concordantly demonstrate that the rate of spectral diffusion is almost insensitive to the applied pressure. This behavior is in contrast with the previously reported pressure-induced speed up of the orientational dynamics, which can be rationalized in terms of large angular jumps involving sudden switching between two hydrogen-bonded configurations. The different trend of the spectral diffusion can be, instead, inferred considering that the first solvation shell preserves the tetrahedral structure with pressure and the OD stretching frequency is only slight perturbed
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