Observing Vibrational Wavepackets during an Ultrafast
Electron Transfer Reaction
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Abstract
Recent
work has proposed that coherent effects impact ultrafast
electron transfer reactions. Here we report studies using broadband
pump–probe and two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy of intramolecular
nuclear motion on the time scale of the electron transfer between
oxazine 1 (Ox1) and dimethylaniline (DMA). We performed time–frequency
analysis on the time domain data to assign signal amplitude modulations
to ground or excited electronic states in the reactive system (Ox1
in DMA) relative to the control system (Ox1 in chloronaphthalene).
It was found that our ability to detect vibrational coherence via
the excited electronic state of Ox1 diminishes on the time scale that
population is lost by electron transfer. However, the vibrational
wavepacket is not damped by the electron transfer process and has
been observed previously by detecting the Ox1 radical transient absorption.
The analysis presented here indicates that the “addition”
of an electron to the photoexcited electron acceptor does not significantly
perturb the vibrational coherence, suggesting its presence as a spectator,
consistent with the Born–Oppenheimer separation of electronic
and nuclear degrees of freedom