1 research outputs found
Observation of Ultrafast Charge Migration in an Amino Acid
We present the first direct measurement of ultrafast
charge migration
in a biomolecular building block – the amino acid phenylalanine.
Using an extreme ultraviolet pulse of 1.5 fs duration to ionize molecules
isolated in the gas phase, the location of the resulting hole was
probed by a 6 fs visible/near-infrared pulse. By measuring the yield
of a doubly charged ion as a function of the delay between the two
pulses, the positive hole was observed to migrate to one end of the
cation within 30 fs. This process is likely to originate from even
faster coherent charge oscillations in the molecule being dephased
by bond stretching which eventually localizes the final position of
the charge. This demonstration offers a clear template for observing
and controlling this phenomenon in the future