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Although coherence is a property inherent to the quantum evolution of molecular electronic states, the high dephasing rates commonly found in these systems has traditionally prevented the manifestation of coherent electronic effects. The development of femtosecond sources has changed this situation, by providing the necessary access to the early stages of electronic evolution that allows the observation of coherent evolution. As remarkable examples, recent research has demonstrated the influence of electronic coherence on controlling the energy flow in two relevant aspects of the natural photosynthesis process: the coherent evolution of the electronic excitation in a multicromophore [1] light-harvesting protein and the intracromophore coherence between electronic excited states of carotenoid pigments.[2] Both cases show how electronic coherence drives the initial behaviour of the system in situations where the memory loss associated to dephasing was thought to dominate the evolution of the system.Herein we report on new aspects of the coherent evolution of the electronic excitation and relaxation of a prototype cromophoric system, naphthalene. The electronic spectroscopy of this aromatic molecule has been extensively studied, yielding a detailed picture of its electronic structure. [3][4][5][6][7] The absorption of the molecule on the low-energy portion of the spectrum is dominated by two pp* excitations that give raise to the L b (S 1 ) and L a (S 2 ) states. The weak S 0 -L b transition is polarized along the long axis of the molecule, while the S 0 -L a with much higher oscillator strength is mainly polarized along the short axis.[3] Despite the relatively large energy gap between both states (~4000 cm À1 ), they are strongly coupled, as demonstrated by the ultrafast internal conversion (t = 30 fs) that populates the lower L b after pumping the S 0 -L a transition. [6] The L a /L b manifold of naphthalene appears to be a good model system to study the intramolecular coherent evolution of ultrafast electronic excitation. It mimics the conditions often found for this phenomenon, where the process is triggered by the absorption of a bright state that is strongly non-adiabatically coupled to a dark one.[8] Herein, the evolution of isolated naphthalene molecules seeded in a supersonic expansion was tracked at femtosecond resolution by delayed ionization, after excitation at different wavelengths in the range of the L a and L b absorptions. Figure 1 shows the transients corresponding to the early evolution of the molecule, collected by excitation at energies resonant with the absorption of the L b state (except Figure 1 d), and delayed ionization with three 800 nm photons. The decays are composed of a prominent peak centred at Dt = 0 that reproduces the ethene nonresonant signal, followed by a constant background extending towards longer delay times. No other dynamic features are found in the signals. Although the Gaussian-like peak at Dt = 0 could be interpreted as a nonresonant contribution, the dependence of its ...
Although coherence is a property inherent to the quantum evolution of molecular electronic states, the high dephasing rates commonly found in these systems has traditionally prevented the manifestation of coherent electronic effects. The development of femtosecond sources has changed this situation, by providing the necessary access to the early stages of electronic evolution that allows the observation of coherent evolution. As remarkable examples, recent research has demonstrated the influence of electronic coherence on controlling the energy flow in two relevant aspects of the natural photosynthesis process: the coherent evolution of the electronic excitation in a multicromophore [1] light-harvesting protein and the intracromophore coherence between electronic excited states of carotenoid pigments.[2] Both cases show how electronic coherence drives the initial behaviour of the system in situations where the memory loss associated to dephasing was thought to dominate the evolution of the system.Herein we report on new aspects of the coherent evolution of the electronic excitation and relaxation of a prototype cromophoric system, naphthalene. The electronic spectroscopy of this aromatic molecule has been extensively studied, yielding a detailed picture of its electronic structure. [3][4][5][6][7] The absorption of the molecule on the low-energy portion of the spectrum is dominated by two pp* excitations that give raise to the L b (S 1 ) and L a (S 2 ) states. The weak S 0 -L b transition is polarized along the long axis of the molecule, while the S 0 -L a with much higher oscillator strength is mainly polarized along the short axis.[3] Despite the relatively large energy gap between both states (~4000 cm À1 ), they are strongly coupled, as demonstrated by the ultrafast internal conversion (t = 30 fs) that populates the lower L b after pumping the S 0 -L a transition. [6] The L a /L b manifold of naphthalene appears to be a good model system to study the intramolecular coherent evolution of ultrafast electronic excitation. It mimics the conditions often found for this phenomenon, where the process is triggered by the absorption of a bright state that is strongly non-adiabatically coupled to a dark one.[8] Herein, the evolution of isolated naphthalene molecules seeded in a supersonic expansion was tracked at femtosecond resolution by delayed ionization, after excitation at different wavelengths in the range of the L a and L b absorptions. Figure 1 shows the transients corresponding to the early evolution of the molecule, collected by excitation at energies resonant with the absorption of the L b state (except Figure 1 d), and delayed ionization with three 800 nm photons. The decays are composed of a prominent peak centred at Dt = 0 that reproduces the ethene nonresonant signal, followed by a constant background extending towards longer delay times. No other dynamic features are found in the signals. Although the Gaussian-like peak at Dt = 0 could be interpreted as a nonresonant contribution, the dependence of its ...
Photoisomerization around a central fulvene-type double bond is known to proceed through a conical intersection at the perpendicular geometry. The process is studied with an indenylidene-dihydropyridine model compound, allowing the use of visible excitation pulses. Transient absorption shows that 1) stimulated emission shifts to the red and loses oscillator strength on a 50 fs timescale, and 2) bleach recovery is highly nonexponential and not affected by solvent viscosity or methyl substitution at the dihydropyridine ring. Quantum-chemical calculations are used to explain point 1 as a result of initial elongation of the central C=C bond with mixing of S(2) and S(1) states. From point 2 it is concluded that internal conversion of S(1)→S(0) does not require torsional motion to the fully perpendicular state. The S(1) population appears to encounter a sink on the torsional coordinate before the conical intersection is reached. Rate equations cannot model the observed ground-state recovery adequately. Instead the dynamics are best described with a strongly damped oscillatory contribution, which could indicate coherent S(1)-S(0) population transfer.
β-Carotene in n-hexane was examined by femtosecond transient absorption and stimulated Raman spectroscopy. Electronic change is separated from vibrational relaxation with the help of band integrals. Overlaid on the decay of S1 excited-state absorption, a picosecond process is found that is absent when the C9 -methyl group is replaced by ethyl or isopropyl. It is attributed to reorganization on the S1 potential energy surface, involving dihedral angles between C6 and C9 . In Raman studies, electronic states S2 or S1 were selected through resonance conditions. We observe a broad vibrational band at 1770 cm(-1) in S2 already. With 200 fs it decays and transforms into the well-known S1 Raman line for an asymmetric C=C stretching mode. Low-frequency activity (<800 cm(-1) ) in S2 and S1 is also seen. A dependence of solvent lines on solute dynamics implies intermolecular coupling between β-carotene and nearby n-hexane molecules.
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