Singlet exciton fission is the process in organic semiconductors through which a spin-singlet exciton converts into a pair of spin-triplet excitons residing on different chromophores, entangled in an overall spin-zero state. For some systems, singlet fission has been shown to occur on the 100 fs timescale and with a 200% yield, but the mechanism of this process remains uncertain. Here we study a model singlet fission system, TIPS-pentacene, using ultrafast vibronic spectroscopy. We observe that vibrational coherence in the initially photogenerated singlet state is transferred to the triplet state and show that this behaviour is effectively identical to that observed in ultrafast internal conversion for polyenes in solution. This similarity in vibronic dynamics suggest that both multi-molecular singlet fission and single-molecular internal conversion are mediated by the same underlying relaxation processes, based on strong coupling between nuclear and electronic degrees of freedom. In its most efficient form this leads to a conical intersection between the coupled electronic states.
The properties of hydrogen ions in aqueous solution are governed by the ability of water to incorporate ions in a dynamical hydrogen bond network, characterized by a structural variability that has complicated the development of a consistent molecular level description of H(+)(aq). Isolated protonated water clusters, H(+)(H2O)n, serve as finite model systems for H(+)(aq), which are amenable to highly sensitive and selective gas phase spectroscopic techniques. Here, we isolate and assign the infrared (IR) signatures of the Zundel-type and Eigen-type isomers of H(+)(H2O)6, the smallest protonated water cluster for which both of these characteristic binding motifs coexist, down into the terahertz spectral region. We use isomer-selective double-resonance population labeling spectroscopy on messenger-tagged H(+)(H2O)6·H2 complexes from 260 to 3900 cm(-1). Ab initio molecular dynamics calculations qualitatively recover the IR spectra of the two isomers and allow attributing the increased width of IR bands associated with H-bonded moieties to anharmonicities rather than excited state lifetime broadening. Characteristic hydrogen-bond stretching bands are observed below 400 cm(-1).
We present infrared photodissociation spectra of the microhydrated nitrate ions NO 3 -(H 2 O) 1-6 , measured from 600 to 1800 cm -1 . The assignment of the spectra is aided by comparison with calculated B3LYP/augcc-pVDZ harmonic frequencies, as well as with higher-level calculations. The IR spectra are dominated by the antisymmetric stretching mode of NO 3 -, which is doubly degenerate in the bare ion but splits into its two components for most microhydrated ions studied here due to asymmetric solvation of the nitrate core. However, for NO 3 -(H 2 O) 3 , the spectrum reveals no lifting of this degeneracy, indicating an ion with a highly symmetric solvation shell. The first three water molecules bind in a bidentate fashion to the terminal oxygen atoms of the nitrate ion, keeping the planar symmetry. The onset of extensive water-water hydrogen bonding is observed starting with four water molecules and persists in the larger clusters.
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