Unraveling dynamics
of solvation and hydrogen bond (H-bond) reorganization
between a solute and solvent is crucial to understand the importance
of specific and nonspecific interactions in a solution-phase chemical
reaction. Ultrafast time-resolved infrared (TRIR) spectroscopy provides
direct opportunity to monitor site-specific intermolecular dynamics
on a real-time scale by probing vibrational marker bands in the excited
state of a solute. Herein, we report the real-time dynamics of vibrational
cooling, solvation, and hydrogen bond reorganization of formylperylene
(FPe) through TRIR spectroscopy of carbonyl (CO) stretching
mode in nonpolar, polar aprotic, and polar protic solvents. High sensitivity
of the CO stretch frequency (υ̅CO) to photoinduced intramolecular charge transfer processes
induced by specific and nonspecific solvent interactions led us to
monitor the dynamics of dipolar solvation, site-specific H-bond formation,
and reorganization processes by the TRIR method. In nonpolar cyclohexane,
the υ̅CO stretch band appears
at 1610 cm–1 and exhibits negligible spectral shift
over several tens of picoseconds. In acetonitrile, the υ̅CO peak shifts to 1594 cm–1 and exhibits a further temporal red shift of about 5 cm–1 with a characteristic solvation time scale of acetonitrile (τ
∼ 0.5 ps). In methanol, υ̅CO exhibits two bands corresponding to free and H-bonded FPe
in early time scale. The free FPe population converts to the hydrogen-bonded
population with a lifetime of about 10 ps. Vibrational cooling (τvc ∼ 12–20 ps) in the excited electronic state
of FPe could independently be monitored from the temporal dynamics
of the ring vibration mode, which is less sensitive to solvation and
hydrogen bonding. The present study provides insight into the specific
and nonspecific solvation-controlled charge transfer dynamics in aprotic
and protic solvents using FPe as a probe.