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1.
J Chem Phys ; 159(13)2023 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37787127

ABSTRACT

Van der Waals clusters composed of He and aromatic molecules provide fundamental information about intermolecular interactions in weakly bound systems. In this study, phenol-helium clusters (PhOH-Hen with n ≤ 2) are characterized for the first time by UV and IR spectroscopies. The S1 ← S0 origin and ionization energy both show small but additive shifts, suggesting π-bound structures of these clusters, a conclusion supported by rotational contour analyses of the S1 origin bands. The OH stretching vibrations of the PhOH moiety in the clusters match with those of bare PhOH in both the S0 and D0 states, illustrating the negligible perturbation of the He atoms on the molecular vibration. Matrix shifts induced by He attachment are discussed based on the observed band positions with the help of complementary quantum chemical calculations. For comparison, the UV and ionization spectra of PhOH-Ne are reported as well.

2.
Chemistry ; 29(44): e202301128, 2023 Aug 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37232017

ABSTRACT

The interplay between solute-solvent and solvent-solvent interactions plays an essential role in solvation dynamics that has important effects on the mechanism and dynamics of chemical reactions in solution. In this study, the rearrangement of the hydration shell induced by photoionization of a solute molecule is probed in a state- and isomer-specific manner by resonant multiphoton ionization detected IR spectroscopy of the prototypical 4-aminobenzonitrile-(H2 O)2 cluster produced in a molecular beam. IR spectra reveal that the water molecules form a cyclic solvent network around the CN group in the initial neutral state (S0 ). Different from the singly-hydrated cluster, in which either the CN or the NH2 group is hydrated, hydration of the NH2 group is not observed in the dihydrated cluster. IR spectra obtained after ionizing the solute molecule into the cation ground state (D0 ) exhibit features ascribed to both NH-bound and CN-bound isomers, indicating that water molecules migrate from the CN to the NH site upon ionization with a yield depending on the ionization excess energy. Analysis of the IR spectra as a function of the excess energy shows that migration produces two different NH2 solvated structures, namely (i) the most stable structure in which both N-H bonds are singly hydrated and (ii) the second most stable isomer in which one of the N-H bonds is hydrated by a H-bonded (H2 O)2 dimer. The product branching ratio of the two isomers depends on the excess energy. The role of the water-water interaction in the hydration rearrangement is discussed based on the potential energy landscape. Solvation dynamics plays an important role in reaction mechanisms in the condensed phase, where not only solute-solvent solvation but also solvent-solvent interactions have a significant influence on the dynamics. Thus, the investigation of solvation dynamics at the molecular level substantially contributes to our understanding of the reaction mechanism. In this study, the dihydrated cluster of 4ABN was utilized as a model for the first solvation layer to elucidate solvent motions induced by ionization of the solute and the role of W-W interactions for the solvent relaxation.

3.
J Phys Chem A ; 125(46): 9969-9981, 2021 Nov 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34761924

ABSTRACT

Structures and ionization-induced solvation dynamics of phenol-(argon)n clusters, PhOH-Arn (n ≤ 5), were studied by using a variety of isomer-selective photoionization and vibrational spectroscopic techniques. Several higher-energy isomers were found and assigned for the first time by systematically controlling the experimental conditions of the supersonic expansion. This behavior is also confirmed for the PhOH-Kr2 cluster. Solvation structures are elucidated by evaluating systematic shifts in the S1 ← S0 origin and ionization energies obtained by resonance-enhanced photoionization, in addition to the OH stretching frequency obtained by IR photodissociation. Isomer-selective picosecond time-resolved IR spectroscopy for the n = 2 clusters revealed that the dynamics for the ionization-induced intermolecular π → H site-switching reaction strongly depends on the initial isomeric structure. In particular, the reaction time for the (1|1) isomer is 7 ps, while that for (2|0) is <3 ps. This difference shows that the switching time is determined by the distance of the reaction coordinate between the initial π-site and the final OH-site.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(1): 73-85, 2021 Dec 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34633007

ABSTRACT

A novel time-resolved pump-probe spectroscopic approach that enables to keep high resolution in both the time and energy domain, nanosecond excitation-picosecond ionization-picosecond infrared probe (ns-ps-ps TRIR) spectroscopy, has been applied to the trans-4-methylformanilide-water (4MetFA-W) cluster. Water migration dynamics from the CO to the NH binding site in a peptide linkage triggered by photoionization of 4MetFA-W is directly monitored by the ps time evolution of IR spectra, and the presence of an intermediate state is revealed. The time evolution is analyzed by rate equations based on a four-state model of the migration dynamics. Time constants for the initial to the intermediate and hot product and to the final product are obtained. The acceleration of the dynamics by methyl substitution and the strong contribution of intracluster vibrational energy redistribution in the termination of the solvation dynamics is suggested. This picture is well confirmed by the ab initio on-the-fly molecular dynamics simulations. Vibrational assignments of 4MetFA and 4MetFA-W in the neutral (S0 and S1) and ionic (D0) electronic states measured by ns IR dip and electron-impact IR photodissociation spectroscopy are also discussed prior to the results of time-resolved spectroscopy.

5.
Chem Sci ; 12(11): 3836-3856, 2021 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34163653

ABSTRACT

Excited State Hydrogen Transfer (ESHT), proposed at the end of the 20th century by the corresponding authors, has been observed in many neutral or protonated molecules and become a new paradigm to understand excited state dynamics/photochemistry of aromatic molecules. For example, a significant number of photoinduced proton-transfer reactions from X-H bonds have been re-defined as ESHT, including those of phenol, indole, tryptophan, aromatic amino acid cations and so on. Photo-protection mechanisms of biomolecules, such as isolated nucleic acids of DNA, are also discussed in terms of ESHT. Therefore, a systematic and up-to-date description of ESHT mechanism is important for researchers in chemistry, biology and related fields. In this review, we will present a general model of ESHT which unifies the excited state proton transfer (ESPT) and the ESHT mechanisms and reveals the hidden role of ESPT in controlling the reaction rate of ESHT. For this purpose, we give an overview of experimental and theoretical work on the excited state dynamics of phenol-(NH3) n clusters and related molecular systems. The dynamics has a significant dependence on the number of solvent molecules in the molecular cluster. Three-color picosecond time-resolved IR/near IR spectroscopy has revealed that ESHT becomes an electron transfer followed by a proton transfer in highly solvated clusters. The systematic change from ESHT to decoupled electron/proton transfer according to the number of solvent molecules is rationalized by a general model of ESHT including the role of ESPT.

6.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 22(10): 5740-5748, 2020 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32104812

ABSTRACT

Time-evolutions of excited state hydrogen transfer (ESHT) in phenol (PhOH)-(NH3)2 clusters have been measured by three-color picosecond (ps) ultraviolet (UV)-near infrared (NIR)-UV pump-probe ion dip spectroscopy. The formation of a reaction product, ˙NH4NH3, is detected by its NIR absorption due to a 3p-3s Rydberg transition. The ESHT reactions from all of the vibronic levels show biexponential time-evolutions, even from the S1 origin. Based on the biexponential time-evolution, it is suggested that there is a second reaction path via the triplet πσ* state, which gives the slow component. The fast time-evolution of the ESHT reaction from the S1 origin is measured to be 268 ps, which is 10-times slower than that in PhOH-(NH3)3, and a higher barrier between the ππ* and reactive πσ* states is suggested. The size dependence of the ESHT reaction rates is discussed based on a potential distortion due to the proton transferred state in the ππ* potential surface.

7.
J Phys Chem A ; 123(32): 6828-6839, 2019 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31304754

ABSTRACT

Infrared (IR) spectra of resorcinol (Rs)-Arn clusters (n = 1 and 2) have been measured in the neutral and cationic ground states (S0 and D0) by IR dip and resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization (REMPI)-IR spectroscopy. The OH stretching vibrations in S0 keep their frequency regardless of the number of Ar atoms and the conformation of the OH groups in Rs (rotamers RsI and RsII), demonstrating that the Ar atoms are attached to the aromatic π-ring (π-bound structure) in S0. In the D0 state, the IR spectra of Rs+-Arn reflect the difference in the Rs conformations (RsI+ and RsII+). For n = 1, the IR spectra of both rotamers are almost the same as those of the corresponding monomer cations, indicating that Ar ligands essentially remain π-bonded after ionization. In contrast, the IR spectra of Rs+-Ar2 show hydrogen-bonded and free OH stretching vibrations, demonstrating that for a significant fraction of the clusters, the Ar atoms migrate from the π-bound site to the OH groups. The ionization-induced π → H migration yields are not unity for both rotamers RsI+-Ar2 and RsII+-Ar2. This result is in sharp contrast to phenol+-Ar2, in which one of the Ar atoms migrates to the OH site with 100% yield. The mechanism leading to the nonunity yield in Rs+-Ar2 is discussed in terms of the number of OH binding sites and Franck-Condon factors. The ionization excess energy dependence of the IR spectra of Rs+-Ar2 and its Rs+-Ar fragments is discussed in terms of the Ar binding energies estimated from the photoionization and photodissociation efficiency spectra.

8.
Faraday Discuss ; 217(0): 256-275, 2019 07 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30994637

ABSTRACT

Flavin compounds are frequently used by nature in photochemical processes because of their unique optical properties which can be strongly modulated by the surrounding environment such as solvation or coordination with metal ions. Herein, we employ vibronic photodissociation spectroscopy of cryogenic M+LF complexes composed of lumiflavin (LF, C13H12N4O2), the parent molecule of the flavin family, and alkali ions (M = Li-Cs) to characterize the strong impact of metalation on the electronic properties of the LF chromophore. With the aid of time-dependent density functional theory calculations (PBE0/cc-pVDZ) coupled to multidimensional Franck-Condon simulations, the visible photodissociation (VISPD) spectra of M+LF ions recorded in the 500-570 nm range are assigned to the S1 ← S0 (ππ*) transitions into the first optically bright S1 state of the lowest-energy M+LF(O4+) isomers. In this O4+ structure, M+ binds in a bent chelate to the lone pairs of both the O4 and the N5 atom of LF. Charge reorganization induced by S1 excitation strongly enhances the interaction between M+ and LF at this binding site, leading to substantial red shifts in the S1 absorption of the order of 10-20% (e.g., from 465 nm in LF to 567 nm in Li+LF). This strong change in M+LF interaction strength in M+LF(O4+) upon ππ* excitation can be rationalized by the orbitals involved in the S1 ← S0 transition and causes strong vibrational activity. In particular, progressions in the intermolecular bending and stretching modes provide an accurate measure of the strength of the M+LF bond. In contrast to the experimentally identified O4+ ions, the predicted S1 origins of other low-energy M+LF isomers, O2+ and O2, are slightly blue-shifted from the S1 of LF, demonstrating that the electronic properties of metalated LF not only drastically change with the size of the metal ion but also with its binding site.


Subject(s)
Alkalies/chemistry , Flavins/chemistry , Ions/chemistry , Optical Phenomena , Photochemical Processes , Photoelectron Spectroscopy , Quantum Theory
9.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(34): 22148-22158, 2018 Aug 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30116801

ABSTRACT

The photochemical properties of flavins depend sensitively on their environment and are strongly modified by coordination with metal ions. Herein, the electronic spectra of cold complexes of the smallest flavin molecule (lumichrome, LC, C12N4O2H10) with alkali ions (M+LC, M = Li-Cs) are measured by photodissociation in the visible range (VISPD) in a cryogenic ion trap coupled to a tandem mass spectrometer and an electrospray ionization source. The observed vibronic spectra of all ions are assigned to the optically bright S1 ← S0 (ππ*) transition of the most stable O4 isomer of M+LC by comparison with quantum chemical calculations at the PBE0/cc-pVDZ level coupled to multidimensional Franck-Condon simulations. The rich vibronic spectra indicate substantial geometry changes upon S1 excitation. Large red shifts of the S1 origins upon metal complexation and progressions in the intermolecular in-plane metal stretch and bend modes demonstrate that the strength of the metal-flavin interaction in M+LC(O4) strongly increases by S1 excitation. The stronger M+LC bond in the S1 state of M+LC(O4) is rationalized by the charge reorganization upon ππ* excitation of the LC chromophore. The computations confirm that the optical properties of LC can be strongly modulated by metalation via both the type and binding site of the metal ion.

10.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(5): 3092-3108, 2018 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29058006

ABSTRACT

Most biochemical processes occur in aqueous solution. Here, we characterize the initial microhydration steps of the 5-hydroxyindole cation (5HI+) in its 2A'' ground electronic state by infrared photodissociation (IRPD) spectroscopy of 5HI+-Wn-Lm clusters (W = H2O, L = Ar and N2, n ≤ 4, m ≤ 2) in a molecular beam and dispersion-corrected density functional theory calculations (B3LYP-D3/aug-cc-pVTZ). Characteristic size- and isomer-dependent XH stretch frequencies (X = O, N) of 5HI+-Wn reveal information about the preferred cluster growth and solvation energies. The IRPD spectrum of 5HI+-W is a superposition of the spectra of two isomers, in which W is H-bonded to the acidic NH or OH group, whereby OHW hydrogen-bonds (H-bonds) are stronger than NHW H-bonds. Spectra of larger 5HI+-Wn clusters (n ≥ 2) elucidate the competition between interior ion solvation and the formation of H-bonded water networks. The nature and strengths of the competing H-bonds are quantified by the noncovalent interaction approach. Comparison to results for neutral 5HI-W and 5HI+-Ln clusters with nonpolar ligands reveals the effects of ionization and ligand type on the intermolecular interaction potential and cluster growth. Comparison to corresponding microhydrated clusters of the phenol, indole, and pyrrole cations illustrates the effects of substitution of functional groups and addition of aromatic rings on the hydration process.

11.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(5): 3148-3164, 2018 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28913535

ABSTRACT

The structure and activity of peptides and proteins strongly rely on their charge state and the interaction with their hydration environment. Here, infrared photodissociation (IRPD) spectra of size-selected microhydrated clusters of cationic acetanilide (AA+, N-phenylacetamide), AA+-(H2O)n with n ≤ 3, are analysed by dispersion-corrected density functional theory calculations at the ωB97X-D/aug-cc-pVTZ level to determine the stepwise microhydration process of this aromatic peptide model. The IRPD spectra are recorded in the informative X-H stretch (νOH, νNH, νCH, amide A, 2800-3800 cm-1) and fingerprint (amide I-II, 1000-1900 cm-1) ranges to probe the preferred hydration motifs and the cluster growth. In the most stable AA+-(H2O)n structures, the H2O ligands solvate the acidic NH proton of the amide by forming a hydrogen-bonded solvent network, which strongly benefits from cooperative effects arising from the excess positive charge. Comparison with neutral AA-H2O reveals the strong impact of ionization on the acidity of the NH proton and the topology of the interaction potential. Comparison with related hydrated formanilide clusters demonstrates the influence of methylation of the amide group (H → CH3) on the shape of the intermolecular potential and the structure of the hydration shell.

12.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(5): 3265-3276, 2018 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29134211

ABSTRACT

Geometries and infrared (IR) spectra in the mid-IR region of phenol-(ammonia)n (PhOH-(NH3)n) (n = 0-10) clusters have been studied using density functional theory (DFT) to investigate the critical number of solvent molecules necessary to promote ground-state proton transfer (GSPT). For n ≤ 8 clusters, the most stable isomer is a non-proton-transferred (non-PT) structure, and all isomers found within 1.5 kcal mol-1 from it are also non-PT structures. For n = 9, the most stable isomer is also a non-PT structure; however, the second stable isomer is a PT structure, whose relative energy is within the experimental criterion of population (0.7 kcal mol-1). For n = 10, the PT structure is the most stable one. We can therefore estimate that the critical size of GSPT is n = 9. This is confirmed by the fact that these calculated IR spectra are in good accordance with our previous experimental results of mid-IR spectra. It is demonstrated that characteristic changes of the ν9a and ν12 bands in the skeletal vibrational region provide clear information that the GSPT reaction has occurred. It was also found that the shortest distance between the π-ring and the solvent moiety is a good indicator of the PT reaction.

13.
Chemistry ; 24(4): 881-890, 2018 Jan 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29032637

ABSTRACT

Excited-state hydrogen transfer (ESHT) is responsible for various photochemical processes of aromatics, including photoprotection of nuclear basis. Its mechanism is explained by internal conversion from the aromatic ππ* to πσ* states via conical intersection. This means that the electron is transferred to a diffuse Rydberg-like σ* orbital apart from proton migration. This picture means the electron and the proton do not move together and the dynamics are different in principle. Here, we have applied picosecond time-resolved near-infrared (NIR) and infrared (IR) spectroscopy to the phenol-(NH3 )5 cluster, the benchmark system of ESHT, and monitored the electron transfer and proton motion independently. The electron transfer monitored by the NIR transition rises within 3 ps, while the overall H transfer detected by the IR absorption of NH vibration appears with a lifetime of about 20 ps. This clearly proves that the electron motion and proton migration are decoupled. Such a difference of the time-evolutions between the NIR absorption and the IR transition has not been detected in a cluster with three ammonia molecules. We will report our full observation together with theoretical calculations of the potential energy surfaces of the ππ* and πσ* states, and will discuss the ESHT mechanism and its cluster size-dependence between n=3 and 5. It is suggested that the presence and absence of a barrier in the proton transfer coordinate cause the different dynamics.

14.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(5): 3079-3091, 2018 Jan 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29143839

ABSTRACT

Solvation plays an essential role in controlling the mechanism and dynamics of chemical reactions in solution. The present study reveals that changes in the local solute-solvent interaction have a great impact on the timescale of solvent rearrangement dynamics. Time-resolved IR spectroscopy has been applied to a hydration rearrangement reaction in the monohydrated 5-hydroxyindole-water cluster induced by photoionization of the solute molecule. The water molecule changes the stable hydration site from the indolic NH site to the substituent OH site, both of which provide a strongly attractive potential for hydration. The rearrangement time constant amounts to 8 ± 2 ns, and is further slowed down by a factor of more than five at lower excess energy. These rearrangement times are slower by about three orders of magnitude than those reported for related systems where the water molecule is repelled from a repulsive part of the interaction potential toward an attractive well. The excess energy dependence of the time constant is well reproduced by RRKM theory. Differences in the reaction mechanism are discussed on the basis of energy relaxation dynamics.

15.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 19(34): 22759-22776, 2017 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28825738

ABSTRACT

We applied infrared (IR) spectroscopy on electronic excited states of a benzene dimer (Bz2) isolated in a supersonic expansion to investigate the vibrational structure and geometry of the excimer (EXC) state where the electronic excitation is equally shared between the two Bz units. The IR spectrum of an EXC produced via the electronic origin of Bz2 gives a simpler spectral appearance than that in the electronic ground state, in which it has a T-shaped structure. Each band position locates nearly at the average of the corresponding vibrations in the electronic ground and excited states of the Bz monomer. This frequency averaging is explained by an excitation exchange model that takes into account vibrational excitations. From the observed frequency averaging, a highly symmetric parallel stacking structure in the EXC state is concluded with the help of a DFT calculation. This model clarifies that Franck-Condon factors between the S1-S0 transition of the monomer govern not only the magnitude of the EXC interaction, but also the configuration of vibrational states. The IR spectrum of the vibrationally excited EXC state produced by excitation to the 61 level of the stem site, on the other hand, shares the IR features both of the EXC state and the local excited (LE) state in which the excitation localizes on one of the benzene rings, making a T-shape contact. The structural interconversion equilibrium between parallel stacking (EXC) and T-shaped (LE) structures due to the vibrational excess energy has been established.

16.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 19(33): 22564-22572, 2017 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28809963

ABSTRACT

Most proteins work in aqueous solution and the interaction with water strongly affects their structure and function. However, experimentally the motion of a specific single water molecule is difficult to trace by conventional methods, because they average over the heterogeneous solvation structure of bulk water surrounding the protein. Here, we provide a detailed atomistic picture of the water rearrangement dynamics around the -CONH- peptide linkage in the two model systems formanilide and acetanilide, which simply differ by the presence of a methyl group at the peptide linkage. The combination of picosecond pump-probe time-resolved infrared spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations demonstrates that the solvation dynamics at the molecular level is strongly influenced by this small structural difference. The effective timescales for solvent migration triggered by ionization are mainly controlled by the efficiency of the kinetic energy redistribution rather than the shape of the potential energy surface. This approach provides a fundamental understanding of protein hydration and may help to design functional molecules in solution with tailored properties.


Subject(s)
Peptides/chemistry , Solvents/chemistry , Acetanilides/chemistry , Formamides/chemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Peptides/metabolism , Spectrophotometry, Infrared , Water/chemistry
17.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 18(35): 24746-54, 2016 Sep 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27550720

ABSTRACT

The ionization-induced π↔ H site switching reaction in phenol(+)-Rg (PhOH(+)-Rg) dimers with Rg = Ar and Kr is traced in real time by picosecond time-resolved infrared (ps-TRIR) spectroscopy. The ps-TRIR spectra show the prompt appearance of the non-vanishing free OH stretching band upon resonant photoionization of the π-bound neutral clusters, and the delayed appearance of the hydrogen-bonded (H-bonded) OH stretching band. This result directly proves that the Rg ligand switches from the π-bound site on the aromatic ring to the H-bonded site at the OH group by ionization. The subsequent H →π back reaction converges the dimer to a π↔ H equilibrium. This result is in sharp contrast to the single-step π→ H forward reaction in the PhOH(+)-Ar2 trimer with 100% yield. The reaction mechanism and yield strongly depend on intracluster vibrational energy redistribution. A classical rate equation analysis for the time evolutions of the band intensities of the two vibrations results in similar estimates for the time constants of the π→ H forward reaction of τ+ = 122 and 73 ps and the H →π back reaction of τ- = 155 and 188 ps for PhOH(+)-Ar and PhOH(+)-Kr, respectively. The one order of magnitude slower time constant in comparison to the PhOH(+)-Ar2 trimer (τ+ = 7 ps) is attributed to the decrease in density of states due to the absence of the second Ar in the dimer. The similar time constants for both PhOH(+)-Rg dimers are well rationalized by a classical interpretation based on the comparable potential energy surfaces, reaction pathways, and density of states arising from their similar intermolecular vibrational frequencies.

18.
J Phys Chem A ; 120(36): 7167-74, 2016 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27548021

ABSTRACT

The geometries of 1-naphthol-(ammonia)n (1-NpOH-(NH3)n) (n = 6-9) clusters have been calculated by using the density functional theory (DFT) to investigate ground-state proton transfer (GSPT). For n ≤ 7 clusters, the most stable isomer is a non-proton-transferred (non-PT) structure, and isomers within 1.4 kcal/mol unstable from it were also non-PT structures. For n = 8 and 9, the most stable isomer is also a non-PT structure; however, the second stable isomer is the PT structure, of which the relative energy is within 0.5 kcal/mol. We therefore concluded that the threshold size of GSPT is n = 8 under the conventional experimental condition. It is also found that the minimal distance between the π-ring and the solvent moiety is a good indicator of the PT reaction. This suggests that the solvation of the π-ring is important to trigger the PT reaction.

19.
J Phys Chem A ; 119(51): 12730-5, 2015 Dec 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26637013

ABSTRACT

The gas phase structure and excited state dynamics of o-aminophenol-H2O complex have been investigated using REMPI, IR-UV hole-burning spectroscopy, and pump-probe experiments with picoseconds laser pulses. The IR-UV spectroscopy indicates that the isomer responsible for the excitation spectrum corresponds to an orientation of the OH bond away from the NH2 group. The water molecule acts as H-bond acceptor of the OH group of the chromophore. The complexation of o-aminophenol with one water molecule induced an enhancement in the excited state lifetime on the band origin. The variation of the excited state lifetime of the complex with the excess energy from 1.4 ± 0.1 ns for the 0-0 band to 0.24 ± 0.3 ns for the band at 0-0 + 120 cm(-1) is very similar to the variation observed in the phenol-NH3 system. This experimental result suggests that the excited state hydrogen transfer reaction is the dominant channel for the non radiative pathway. Indeed, excited state ab initio calculations demonstrate that H transfer leading to the formation of the H3O(•) radical within the complex is the main reactive pathway.

20.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 17(44): 29969-77, 2015 Nov 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26490096

ABSTRACT

The dynamics of a solvent is important for many chemical and biological processes. Here, the migration dynamics of a single water molecule is triggered by the photoionization of the 4-aminobenzonitrile-water (4ABN-W) cluster and monitored in real time by picosecond time-resolved IR (ps TRIR) spectroscopy. In the neutral cluster, water is hydrogen-bonded to the CN group. When this CN-bound cluster is selectively ionized with an excess energy of 1238 cm(-1), water migrates with a lifetime of τ = 17 ps from the CN to the NH2 group, forming a more stable 4ABN(+)-W(NH) isomer with a yield of unity. By decreasing the ionization excess energy, the yield of the CN → NH2 reaction is reduced. The relatively slow migration in comparison to the ionization-induced solvent dynamics in the related acetanilide-water cluster cation (τ = 5 ps) is discussed in terms of the internal excess energy after photoionization and the shape of the potential energy surface.

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