The possibility that chemical reactions may be controlled by tailored femtosecond laser pulses has inspired recent studies that take advantage of their short pulse duration, comparable to intramolecular dynamics, and high peak intensity to fragment and ionize molecules. In this article, we present an experimental quest to control the chemical reactions that take place when isolated molecules interact with shaped near-infrared laser pulses with peak intensities ranging from 1013 to 1016 W/cm2. Through the exhaustive evaluation of hundreds of thousands of experiments, we methodically evaluated the molecular response of 16 compounds, including isomers, to the tailored light fields, as monitored by time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Analysis of the experimental data, taking into account its statistical significance, leads us to uncover important trends regarding the interaction of isolated molecules with an intense laser field. Despite the energetics involved in fragmentation and ionization, the integrated second-harmonic generation of a given laser pulse (ISHG), which was recorded as an independent diagnostic parameter, was found to be linearly proportional to the total ion yield (IMS) generated by that pulse in all of our pulse shaping measurements. Order of magnitude laser control over the relative yields of different fragment ions was observed for most of the molecules studied; the fragmentation yields were found to vary monotonically with IMS and/or ISHG. When the extensive changes in fragmentation yields as a function of IMS were compared for different phase functions, we found essentially identical results. This observation implies that fragmentation depends on a parameter that is responsible for IMS and independent from the particular time-frequency structure of the shaped laser pulse. With additional experiments, we found that individual ion yields depend only on the average pulse duration, implying that coherence does not play a role in the observed changes in yield as a function of pulse shaping. These findings were consistently observed for all molecules studied (p-, m-, o-nitrotoluene, 2,4-dinitrotoluene, benzene, toluene, naphthalene, azulene, acetone, acetyl chloride, acetophenone, p-chrolobenzonitrile, N,N-dimethylformamide, dimethyl phosphate, 2-chloroethyl ethyl sulfide, and tricarbonyl-[eta5-1-methyl-2,4-cyclopentadien-1-yl]-manganese). The exception to our conclusion is that the yield of small singly-charged fragments resulting from a multiple ionization process in a subset of molecules, were found to be highly sensitive to the phase structure of the intense pulses. This coherent process plays a minimal role in photofragmentation; therefore, we consider it an exception rather than a rule. Changes in the fragmentation process are dependent on molecular structure, as evidenced in a number of isomers, therefore femtosecond laser fragmentation could provide a practical dimension to analytical chemistry techniques.
Reported herein is a combination of experimental and DFT/TDDFT theoretical investigations of the ground and excited states of 1,4,8,11,15,18,22,25-Octabutoxyphthalocyaninato-nickel(II), NiPc(BuO)(8), and the dynamics of its deactivation after excitation into the S(1)(pi,pi) state in toluene solution. According to X-ray crystallographic analysis NiPc(BuO)(8) has a highly saddled structure in the solid state. However, DFT studies suggest that in solution the complex is likely to flap from one D(2)(d)-saddled conformation to the opposite one through a D(4)(h)-planar structure. The spectral and kinetic changes for the complex in toluene are understood in terms of the 730 nm excitation light generating a primarily excited S(1) (pi,pi) state that transforms initially into a vibrationally hot (3)(d(z)2,d(x)2(-)(y)2) state. Cooling to the zeroth state is complete after ca. 8 ps. The cold (d,d) state converted to its daughter state, the (3)LMCT (pi,d(x)2(-)(y)2), which itself decays to the ground state with a lifetime of 640 ps. The proposed deactivation mechanism applies to the D(2)(d)-saddled and the D(4)(h)-planar structure as well. The results presented here for NiPc(BuO)(8) suggest that in nickel phthalocyanines the (1,3)LMCT (pi,d(x)2(-)(y)2) states may provide effective routes for radiationless deactivation of the (1,3)(pi,pi) states.
The inherent brevity of ultrashort laser pulses prevents a direct measurement of their electric field as a function of time; therefore different approaches based on autocorrelation have been used to characterize them. We present a discussion, guided by experimental studies, regarding accurate measurement, compression, and shaping of ultrashort laser pulses without autocorrelation or interferometry. Our approach based on phase shaping, multiphoton intrapulse interference phase scan, provides a direct measurement of the spectral phase. Illustrations of this method include new results demonstrating wavelength independence, compatibility with sub-5 fs pulses, and a perfect match for experimental coherent control and biomedical imaging applications.
Although tandem mass spectrometry has revolutionized the identification and structural characterization of peptides and proteins, future advances in comprehensive proteome analysis will depend on the development of improved methods for ion activation that yield greater sequence information, and with selective control over the fragmentation chemistry. This report presents initial findings that demonstrate the utility of a novel ion activation method using ultrashort (approximately 30 fs) laser pulses as a means to overcome the limitations of current technologies, while opening the door to solving significant challenges in protein and peptide analysis.
Transient absorption spectrometry of Cu(I)-phenanthrolines in CH2Cl2 reveals ligand-independent dynamic processes lasting 15 ps, which are associated with the peculiar structural rearrangements occurring for this class of compounds upon photoexcitation.
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