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1.
J Chem Phys ; 160(3)2024 Jan 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38230809

ABSTRACT

Two-dimensional terahertz-infrared-visible (2D TIRV) spectroscopy directly measures the coupling between quantum high-frequency vibrations and classical low-frequency modes of molecular motion. In addition to coupling strength, the signal intensity in 2D TIRV spectroscopy can also depend on the selection rules of the excited transitions. Here, we explore the selection rules in 2D TIRV spectroscopy by studying the coupling between the high-frequency CH3 stretching and low-frequency vibrations of liquid dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). Different excitation pathways are addressed using variations in laser pulse timing and different polarizations of exciting pulses and detected signals. The DMSO signals generated via different excitation pathways can be readily distinguished in the spectrum. The intensities of different excitation pathways vary unequally with changes in polarization. We explain how this difference stems from the intensities of polarized and depolarized Raman and hyper-Raman spectra of high-frequency modes. These results apply to various systems and will help design and interpret new 2D TIRV spectroscopy experiments.

2.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(38): 8630-8637, 2023 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37728562

ABSTRACT

The interaction of quantum-mechanical systems with a fluctuating thermal environment (bath) is fundamental to molecular mechanics and energy transport/dissipation. Its complete picture requires mode-specific measurements of this interaction and an understanding of its nature. Here, we present a combined experimental and theoretical study providing detailed insights into the coupling between a high-frequency vibrational two-level system and thermally excited terahertz modes. Experimentally, two-dimensional terahertz-infrared-visible spectroscopy reports directly on the coupling between quantum oscillators represented by CH3 streching vibrations in liquid dimethyl sulfoxide and distinct low-frequency modes. Theoretically, we present a mixed quantum-classical formalism of the sample response to enable the simultaneous quantum description of high-frequency oscillators and a classical description of the bath. We derive the strength and nature of interaction and find different coupling between CH3 stretch and low-frequency modes. This general approach enables quantitative and mode-specific analysis of coupled quantum and classical dynamics in complex chemical systems.

3.
J Chem Phys ; 158(13): 134201, 2023 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37031123

ABSTRACT

Terahertz molecular motions are often probed by high-frequency molecular oscillators in different types of non-linear vibrational spectroscopy. Recently developed two-dimensional terahertz-infrared-visible spectroscopy allows direct measuring of this coupling and, thus, obtaining site-specific terahertz vibrational spectrum. However, these data are affected by the intensity and phase of the employed laser pulses. In this work, we develop a method of extracting sample response-representing solely physical properties of a material-from experimental spectra. Using dimethyl sulfoxide as a model molecule to verify this method, we measure the coupling between C-H stretch vibration of its methyl groups and terahertz intramolecular twist and wagging modes.

4.
J Phys Chem B ; 124(31): 6825-6834, 2020 08 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32645266

ABSTRACT

Photophysical properties of tricarbocyanine dyes in various solvents have been widely investigated using a variety of spectroscopic tools. However, the presence of several ground-state isomers and interconversion between these isomers on an ultrafast timescale upon photoexcitation render unambiguous assignment of spectral features quite difficult. In this work, ultrafast excited-state dynamics of two tricarbocyanine dyes in two solvents, DNTTCI and IR140, in ethanol and ethylene glycol, are studied by two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy (2DES). We present a detailed discussion on design and calibration of the 2DES apparatus and on the method for data processing by phase-cycling. For DNTTCI we report a method to obtain solvation correlation function, the nature of which is found to be strongly dependent on the excitation frequencies; a blue-shifted spectrum at early time is observed and explained based on preferential emission from a subset among various isomers having overlapping spectral features. For IR140 in ethanol, four isomers with distinct spectral features are identified, and most importantly, three of these isomers were found to interconvert upon photoexcitation which completes within 100 fs and is explained based on a kinetic model of consecutive chemical reaction. Density functional theory calculations show the presence of several ground-state isomers for both these dyes. Through this work we demonstrate how 2DES can help us to decipher distinct excited-state photophysics in two carbocyanine dyes, polar solvation and photoisomerization, by resolving spectral congestion without sacrificing time resolution.

5.
Chemphyschem ; 20(11): 1488-1496, 2019 Jun 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30969000

ABSTRACT

The dynamic role of solvent in influencing the rates of physico-chemical processes (for example, polar solvation and electron transfer) has been extensively studied using time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. Here we study ultrafast excited state relaxation dynamics of three different fluorescent probes (DNTTCI, IR-140 and IR-144) in two polar solvents, ethanol and ethylene glycol, using spectrally resolved degenerate pump-probe spectroscopy. We discuss how time-resolved emission spectra can be directly used for constructing relaxation correlation function, obviating spectral reconstruction and estimation of time-zero spectrum in non-polar solvents. We show that depending on the specific probe used, the relaxation dynamics is governed either by intramolecular vibrational relaxation (for IR140) or by intermolecular solvation (for DNTTCI) or by both (for IR144). We further show (using DNTTCI as a probe) that major differences in solvation by ethanol and ethylene glycol is contributed by early time (<1 ps) dynamics.

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