Femtosecond ring-opening dynamics of 1,3-cyclohexadiene (CHD) in gas phase upon two-photon excitation at 400 nm (=3.1 eV) was investigated by time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy using 42 nm (=29.5 eV) high harmonic photons probing the dynamics of the lower-lying occupied molecular orbitals (MOs), which are the fingerprints of the molecular structure. After 500 fs, the photoelectron intensity of the MO constituting the C[double bond, length as m-dash]C sigma bond (σ) of CHD was enhanced, while that of the MO forming the C-C sigma bond (σ) of CHD was decreased. The changes in the photoelectron spectra suggest that the ring of CHD opens to form a 1,3,5-hexatriene (HT) after 500 fs. The dynamics of the σ and σ bands between 200 and 500 fs reflects the ring deformation to a conical intersection between the 2A and 1A potential energy surfaces prior to the ring-opening reaction.
Using 42 nm high harmonic pulses, the dissociation dynamics of 1,2-butadiene was investigated by time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (TRPES), enabling us to observe dynamical changes of multiple molecular orbitals (MOs) with higher temporal resolution than conventional light sources. Because each lower-lying occupied MO has particular spatial electron distribution, the structural dynamics of photochemical reaction can be revealed. On the femtosecond time scale, a short-lived excited state with a lifetime of 37 ± 15 fs and the coherent oscillation of the photoelectron yield stimulated by Hertzberg-Teller coupling were observed. Ab initio molecular dynamics simulations in the electronically excited state find three relaxation pathways from the vertically excited structure in S1 to the ground state, and one of them is the dominant relaxation pathway, observed as the short-lived excited state. On the picosecond time scale, the photoelectron yields related to the C-C bond decreased upon photoexcitation, indicating C-C bond cleavage.
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