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1.
J Phys Chem A ; 123(51): 11022-11030, 2019 Dec 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31790247

RESUMO

Recent years have seen a huge progress in the development of phase-sensitive second-order laser spectroscopy which has proven to be a very powerful tool for the investigation of interfaces. In these techniques, the nonlinear interaction between two short laser pulses and the sample yields a signal pulse which subsequently interferes with a third pulse, the so-called local oscillator. To obtain accurate phase information, the relative phases between the signal and local oscillator pulses must be stabilized and their timings precisely controlled. Despite much progress made, fulfilling both requirements remains a formidable experimental challenge. The two common approaches employ different beam geometries which each yields its particular advantages and deficiencies. While noncollinear spectrometers allow for a relatively simple timing control they typically yield poor phase stability and require a challenging alignment. Collinear approaches in contrast come with a simplified alignment and improved phase stability but typically suffer from a highly limited timing control. In this contribution we present a general experimental solution which allows for combining the advantages of both approaches while being compatible with most of the common spectrometer types. On the basis of a collinear geometry, we exploit different selected polarization states of the light pulses in well-defined places in the spectrometer to achieve a precise timing control. The combination of this technique with a balanced detection scheme allows for the acquisition of highly accurate phase-resolved nonlinear spectra without any loss in experimental flexibility. In fact, we show that the implementation of this technique allows us to employ advanced pulse timing schemes inside the spectrometer, which can be used to suppress nonlinear background signals and extend the capabilities of our spectrometer to measure phase-resolved sum frequency spectra of interfaces in a liquid cell.

2.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 29(41): 414002, 2017 Oct 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28726672

RESUMO

Surfaces whose macroscopic properties can be switched by light are potentially useful in a wide variety of applications. One such promising application is electrochemical sensors that can be gated by optically switching the electrode on or off. One way to make such a switchable electrode is by depositing a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) of bistable, optically switchable molecules onto an electrode surface. Quantitative application of any such sensor requires understanding how changes in interfacial field affect the composition of photostationary states, i.e. how does electrode potential affect the extent to which the electrode is on or off when irradiated, and the structure of the SAM. Here we address these questions for a SAM of a 6-nitro-substituted spiro[2H-1-benzopyran-2,2'-indoline] covalently attached through a dithiolane linker to an Au electrode immersed in a 0.1 M solution of Tetramethylammonium hexafluorophosphate in Acetonitrile using interface-specific vibrational spectroscopy. We find that in the absence of irradiation, when the SAM is dominated by the closed spiropyran form, variations in potential of 1 V have little effect on spiropyran relative stability. In contrast, under UV irradiation small changes in potential can have dramatic effects: changes in potential of 0.2 V can completely destabilize the open merocyanine form of the SAM relative to the spiropyran and dramatically change the chromophore orientation. Quantitatively accounting for these effects is necessary to employ this, or any other optically switchable bistable chromophore, in electrochemical applications.

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