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1.
The excited-state dynamics of adenine and thymine dimers and the adenine-thymine base pair were investigated by femtosecond pump-probe ionization spectroscopy with excitation wavelengths of 250-272 nm. The base pairs showed a characteristic ultrafast decay of the initially excited pi pi* state to an n pi* state (lifetime tau(pi pi*) approximately 100 fs) followed by a slower decay of the latter with tau(n pi*) approximately 0.9 ps for (adenine)2, tau(n pi*) = 6-9 ps for (thymine)2, and tau(n pi*) approximately 2.4 ps for the adenine-thymine base pair. In the adenine dimer, a competing decay of the pi pi* state via the pi sigma* state greatly suppressed the n pi* state signals. Similarities of the excited-state decay parameters in the isolated bases and the base pairs suggest an intramonomer relaxation mechanism in the base pairs.  相似文献   

2.
The hybrid configuration interaction singles/time dependent density functional theory approach of Dreuw and Head-Gordon [Dreuw, A.; Head-Gordon, M. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2004, 126, 4007] has been applied to study the potential energy landscape and accessibility of the charge-transfer pipi* excited state in the dimer of 7-azaindole, which has been traditionally considered a model for DNA base pairing. It is found that the charge-transfer pipi* excited state preferentially stabilizes the product of a single proton transfer. In this situation, the crossing between this state and the photoactive electronic state of the dimer is accessible. It is found that the charge-transfer pipi* excited state has a very steep potential energy profile with respect to any single proton-transfer coordinate and, in contrast, an extremely flat potential energy profile with respect to the stretch of the single proton-transfer complex. This is predicted to bring about a pair of rare fragments of the 7-azaindole dimer, physically separated and hence having very long lifetimes. This could have implications in the DNA base pairs of which the system is an analogue, in the form of replication errors.  相似文献   

3.
Femtosecond dynamics of riboflavin, the parent chromophore of biological blue-light receptors, was measured by broadband transient absorption and stationary optical spectroscopy in polar solution. Rich photochemistry is behind the small spectral changes observed: (i) loss of oscillator strength around time zero, (ii) sub-picosecond (ps) spectral relaxation of stimulated emission (SE), and (iii) coherent vibrational motion along a' (in-) and a' (out-of-plane) modes. Loss of oscillator strength is deduced from the differences in the time-zero spectra obtained in water and DMSO, with stationary spectroscopy and fluorescence decay measurements providing additional support. The spectral difference develops faster than the time resolution (20 fs) and is explained by formation of a superposition state between the optically active (1pi pi*) S1 and closely lying dark (1n pi*) states via vibronic coupling. Subsequent spectral relaxation involves decay of weak SE in the blue, 490 nm, together with rise and red shift of SE at 550 nm. The process is controlled by solvation (characteristic times 0.6 and 0.8 ps in water and DMSO, respectively). Coherent oscillations for a' and a' modes show up in different regions of the SE band. a' modes emerge in the blue edge of the SE and dephase faster than solvation. In turn, a' oscillations are found in the SE maximum and dephase on the solvation timescale. The spectral distribution of coherent oscillations according to mode symmetry is used to assign the blue edge of the SE band to a 1n pi*-like state (A'), whereas the optically active 1pi pi* (A') state emits around the SE maximum. The following model comes out: optical excitation occurs to the Franck-Condon pi pi* state, a pi pi*-n pi* superposition state is formed on an ultrafast timescale, vibrational coherence is transferred from a' to a' modes by pi pi*-n pi* vibronic coupling, and subsequent solvation dynamics alters the pi pi*/n pi* population ratio.  相似文献   

4.
Azobenzene E<==>Z photoisomerization, following excitation to the bright S(pi pi*) state, is investigated by means of ab initio CASSCF optimizations and perturbative CASPT2 corrections. Specifically, by elucidating the S(pi pi*) deactivation paths, we explain the mechanism responsible for azobenzene photoisomerization, the lower isomerization quantum yields observed for the S(pi pi*) excitation than for the S1(n pi*) excitation in the isolated molecule, and the recovery of the Kasha rule observed in sterically hindered azobenzenes. We find that a doubly excited state is a photoreaction intermediate that plays a very important role in the decay of the bright S(pi pi*). We show that this doubly excited state, which is immediately populated by molecules excited to S(pi pi*), drives the photoisomerization along the torsion path and also induces a fast internal conversion to the S1(n pi*) at a variety of geometries, thus shaping (all the most important features of) the S(pi pi*) decay pathway and photoreactivity. We reach this conclusion by determining the critical structures, the minimum energy paths originating on the bright S(pi pi*) state and on other relevant excited states including S1(n pi*), and by characterizing the conical intersection seams that are important in deciding the photochemical outcome. The model is consistent with the most recent time-resolved spectroscopic and photochemical data.  相似文献   

5.
CASSCF computations show that the hydrogen-transfer-induced fluorescence quenching of the (1)(pi,pi*) excited state of zwitterionic tryptophan occurs in three steps: (1) formation of an intramolecular excited-state complex, (2) hydrogen transfer from the amino acid side chain to the indole chromophore, and (3) radiationless decay through a conical intersection, where the reaction path bifurcates to a photodecarboxylation and a phototautomerization route. We present a general model for fluorescence quenching by hydrogen donors, where the radiationless decay occurs at a conical intersection (real state crossing). At the intersection, the reaction responsible for the quenching is aborted, because the reaction path bifurcates and can proceed forward to the products or backward to the reactants. The position of the intersection along the quenching coordinate depends on the nature of the states and, in turn, affects the formation of photoproducts during the quenching. For a (1)(n,pi*) model system reported earlier (Sinicropi, A.; Pogni, R.; Basosi, R.; Robb, M. A.; Gramlich, G.; Nau, W. M.; Olivucci, M. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 2001, 40, 4185-4189), the ground and the excited state of the chromophore are hydrogen acceptors, and the excited-state hydrogen transfer is nonadiabatic and leads directly to the intersection point. There, the hydrogen transfer is aborted, and the reaction can return to the reactant pair or proceed further to the hydrogen-transfer products. In the tryptophan case, the ground state is not a hydrogen acceptor, and the excited-state hydrogen transfer is an adiabatic, sequential proton and electron transfer. The decay to the ground state occurs along a second reaction coordinate associated with decarboxylation of the amino acid side chain and the corresponding aborted conical intersection. The results show that, for (1)(pi,pi*) states, the hydrogen transfer alone is not sufficient to induce the quenching, and explain why fluorescence quenching induced by hydrogen donors is less general for (1)(pi,pi*) than for (1)(n,pi*) states.  相似文献   

6.
The fragmentation dynamics of indole molecules following excitation at 193.3 nm, and at a number of different wavelengths in the range 240 < or = lambda(phot) < or = 286 nm, have been investigated by H Rydberg atom photofragment translational spectroscopy. The longer wavelength measurements have been complemented by measurements of excitation spectra for forming parent and fragment ions by two (or more) photon ionisation processes. Analysis identifies at least three distinct contributions to the observed H atom yield, two of which are attributable to dissociation of indole following radiationless transfer from the 1pi pi* excited states (traditionally labelled 1L(b) and 1L(a)) prepared by UV single photon absorption. The structured channel evident in total kinetic energy release (TKER) spectra recorded at lambda(phot) < or = 263 nm is rationalised in terms of N-H bond fission following initial pi* <-- pi excitation and subsequent coupling to the 1pi sigma* potential energy surface via a conical intersection between the respective surfaces--thereby validating recent theoretical predictions regarding the importance of this process (Sobolewski et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2002, 4, 1093). Analysis provides an upper limit for the N-H bond strength in indole: D0(H-indolyl) < or = 31,900 cm(-1). Unimolecular decay of highly vibrationally excited ground state molecules formed by internal conversion from the initially prepared 1pi pi* states is a source of (slow) H atoms but their contribution to the TKER spectra measured in the present work is dwarfed by that from H atoms generated by one or more (unintended but unavoidable) multiphoton processes.  相似文献   

7.
The trans-azobenzene molecule is thought to prefer a planar C2h geometry, in gas phase as well as in solution, according to the most recent computational studies. As a consequence, the weak n-->pi* absorption band is forbidden by symmetry at the equilibrium geometry, and its intensity depends on the effect of the vibrational motions on the electronic structure. In this computational study, we determine the contribution of the vibrational modes to the oscillator strength, taking into account the anharmonicity, the thermal distributions, and the solvent effects. The good agreement of our results with the measured absorption spectrum confirms the C2h equilibrium structure of trans-azobenzene, with a relatively easy torsion of the phenyl groups around the N--C bonds. We also address the question of the polarization of this transition, which is a preliminary step to interpret the time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements [C.-W. Chang et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 126, 10109 (2004)], a very sensitive probe of solvent effects on the excited state dynamics.  相似文献   

8.
UB3LYP/6-31G* calculations find that alpha-dicarbonyl-annelated cyclopentadienyl radical 1 has a sigma ground state, which is formed by excitation of an electron from the in-phase combination of carbonyl lone-pair orbitals into the singly occupied pi orbital. Similarly, tetrakis-annelated cyclooctatetraene 3 is calculated to have very-low-lying singlet and triplet excited states, which result from excitations of electrons from the b1g combination of lone pair orbitals into the empty pi nonbonding MO of the COT ring.  相似文献   

9.
Excitation-energy dependence of fluorescence intensity and fluorescence lifetime has been measured for 4-dimethylaminobenzonitrile (DMABN), 4-aminobenzonitrile (ABN), 4-diisopropylaminobenzonitrile (DIABN), and 1-naphthonitrile (NN) in a supersonic free jet. In all cases, the fluorescence yield decreases rather dramatically, whereas the fluorescence lifetime decreases only moderately for S1 (pi pi*, L(b)) excess vibrational energy exceeding about 1000 cm(-1). This is confirmed by comparison of the normalized fluorescence excitation spectrum with the absorption spectrum of the compound in the vapor phase. The result indicates that the strong decrease in the relative fluorescence yield at higher energies is due mostly to a decrease in the radiative decay rate of the emitting state. Comparison of the experimental results with the TDDFT potential energy curves for excited states strongly suggests that the decrease in the radiative decay rate of the aminobenzonitriles at higher energies is due to the crossing of the pi pi* singlet state by the lower-lying pi sigma*(C[triple bond]N) singlet state of very small radiative decay rate. The threshold energy for the fluorescence "break-off" is in good agreement with the computed energy barrier for the pi pi*/pi sigma* crossing. For NN, on the other hand, the observed decrease is in fluorescence yield at higher excitation energies can best be attributed to the crossing of the pi pi* singlet state by the pi sigma* triplet state.  相似文献   

10.
For a molecule which contains an intramolecular hydrogen bond (IMHB) in its chemical structure to undergo an excited singlet intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT) process, on photoexcitation, there must occur a simultaneous increase, in a substantial manner, in the acidity of the proton donor and the basicity of the proton acceptor forming the IMHB [J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2001, 123, 11940]. For the reason that those changes occur on photoexcitation of the 2-hydroxyacetophenone but not for 1-hydroxy-acetonaphthone, one draws the conclusion that, while ESIPT is operative in the 1(pi,pi*)(1) electronic state of the monocyclic compound 2-hydroxyacetophenone, it is not operative in its bicyclic homolog 1-hydroxy-2-acetonaphthone. We have shown the photophysics of 1-hydroxy-2-acetonaphthone in its first excited electronic state to be governed by two stable, easily reconverted enol structures, the presence of which causes the peaks in the free-jet fluorescence excitation spectrum for the compound to split into two of similar strength. In this paper, we rationalize photophysical evidence for 1-hydroxy-2-acetonaphthone obtained by femtosecond spectroscopy over the past 13 years in the light of existing photophysical patterns based on steady-state spectra for the compound [J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1993, 115, 4321].  相似文献   

11.
Mechanisms of the light-induced ligand exchange reaction of (trans-I) Ru(dcbpy)(CO)2I2 (dcbpy = 4,4'-dicarboxylic acid-2,2'-bipyridine) in ethanol have been studied by transient absorption spectroscopy. Ultraviolet 20 fs excitation pulses centered at 325 nm were used to populate a vibrationally hot excited pi bipyridyl state of the reactant that quickly relaxes to a dissociative Ru-I state resulting in the release of one of the carbonyl groups. Quantum yield measurements have indicated that about 40% of the initially exited reactant molecules form the final photoproduct. A 62 fs rise component in the transient absorption (TA) signal was observed at all probe wavelengths in the visible region for the ongoing reaction, while the rise for the photoproduct was pulse limited (20 fs). We assign the observed 62 fs time component to the depopulation of the repulsive CO dissociative state. Vibrational coherences of the TA signals were observed at a wavenumber of 90 cm(-1). The resolved frequency, typical of I-Ru-I vibrational modes, is assigned to trans-cis isomerization of the iodines of the five-coordinated intermediate and damping of this oscillation in 500 fs to simultaneous solvent coordination. Cooling of the hot reactant and the product molecules occurs on a much slower time scale from 4 to 270 ps (Lehtovuori, V.; Aumanen, J.; Myllyperki?, P.; Rini, M.; Nibbering, E. T. J.; Korppi-Tommola, J. J. Phys. Chem. A 2004, 108, 1644).  相似文献   

12.
The active role of the optically dark pi sigma* state, following UV absorption, has been implicated in the photochemistry of a number of biomolecules. This work focuses on the role of the pi sigma* state in the photochemistry of phenol upon excitation at 200 nm. By probing the neutral hydrogen following UV excitation, we show that hydrogen elimination along the dissociative pi sigma* potential energy surface occurs within 103 +/- 30 fs, indicating efficient coupling at the S1/S2 and S0/S2 conical intersections, with no identifiable role of statistical unimolecular decay of vibronically excited (S0) phenol in the timeframe of our measurements.  相似文献   

13.
The photoinduced hydrogen elimination reaction in phenol via the conical intersections of the dissociative 1pi sigma* state with the 1pi pi* state and the electronic ground state has been investigated by time-dependent quantum wave-packet calculations. A model including three intersecting electronic potential-energy surfaces (S0, 1pi sigma*, and 1pi pi*) and two nuclear degrees of freedom (OH stretching and OH torsion) has been constructed on the basis of accurate ab initio multireference electronic-structure data. The electronic population transfer processes at the conical intersections, the branching ratio between the two dissociation channels, and their dependence on the initial vibrational levels have been investigated by photoexciting phenol from different vibrational levels of its ground electronic state. The nonadiabatic transitions between the excited states and the ground state occur on a time scale of a few tens of femtoseconds if the 1pi pi*-1pi sigma* conical intersection is directly accessible, which requires the excitation of at least one quantum of the OH stretching mode in the 1pi pi* state. It is shown that the node structure, which is imposed on the nuclear wave packet by the initial preparation as well as by the transition through the first conical intersection (1pi pi*-1pi sigma*), has a profound effect on the nonadiabatic dynamics at the second conical intersection (1pi sigma*-S0). These findings suggest that laser control of the photodissociation of phenol via IR mode-specific excitation of vibrational levels in the electronic ground state should be possible.  相似文献   

14.
The synthesis, photophysics, cyclic voltammetry, spectroelectrochemistry, and electrogenerated chemiluminescence (ECL) properties of a series of unsymmetrical star-shaped oligophenylenes IT1-IT4 are reported. The electronic couplings among the three oligofluorene arms in IT1-IT4 are strong due to the para-ortho branched isotruxene core. The ortho conjugation effect results in band splitting in the absorption spectra for both the neutral and the radical ionic form with a stronger effect for the latter. However, such an ortho conjugation effect becomes weaker as the oligofluorene arms are longer. The same fluorescence maxima displayed by IT2-IT4 suggest that the exciton coherence size (or the bound electron-hole pair) is no larger than 16 phenylene rings. The little chain-length dependence of the first reduction and oxidation potentials for IT1-IT4 suggests that the reversible electron-transfer processes of the neutral species are mainly associated with the isotruxene core. The ECL of IT1-IT4 is from the singlet excited state, but the spectra are red shifted with respect to the fluorescence spectra of dilute solutions due to the reabsorption effect. Our results also reveal that the meta conjugation interactions in the previously reported C 3-symmetrical truxene-oligofluorene analogs T1-T4 (Kanibolotsky, A. L.; Berridge, R.; Skabara, P. J.; Perepichka, I. F.; Bradley, D. D. C.; Koeberg, M. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2004, 126, 13695-13702) are rather weak.  相似文献   

15.
Qualitative valence bond formulations by Hiberty and co-workers (Hiberty, P. C.; Megret, C.; Song, L.; Wu, W.; Shaik, S. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2006, 128, 2836) of mechanisms for the radical exchange reactions H*+F:H-->H:F+H* and F*+H:F-->F:H+F* are compared to a previously published formulation of the generalized radical exchange reaction X*+R:Y-->X:R+Y*. The former formulation uses covalent-ionic VB complexes, and the latter formulation, which is more general, involves the formation of reactant-like and product-like complexes at intermediate stages along the reaction coordinate.  相似文献   

16.
Despite decades of research, the mechanism by which coenzyme B12 (adenosylcobalamin, AdoCbl)-dependent enzymes promote homolytic cleavage of the cofactor's Co-C bond to initiate catalysis has continued to elude researchers. In this work, we utilized magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy to explore how the electronic structure of the reduced B12 cofactor (i.e., the post-homolysis product Co2+ Cbl) is modulated by the enzyme methylmalonyl-CoA mutase. Our data reveal a fairly uniform stabilization of the Co 3d orbitals relative to the corrin pi/pi*-based molecular orbitals when Co2+ Cbl is bound to the enzyme active site, particularly in the presence of substrate. Contrastingly, our previous studies (Brooks, A. J.; Vlasie, M.; Banerjee, R.; Brunold, T. C. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2004, 126, 8167-8180.) showed that when AdoCbl is bound to the MMCM active site, no enzymatic perturbation of the Co3+ Cbl electronic structure occurs, even in the presence of substrate (analogues). Collectively, these observations provide direct evidence that enzymatic Co-C bond activation involves stabilization of the post-homolysis product, Co2+ Cbl, rather than destabilization of the Co3+ Cbl "ground" state.  相似文献   

17.
The purpose of this research was to explore the unstirred, ferroin-catalyzed Belousov-Zhabotinsky (BZ) reaction as an experimental model for the response of excitable media to small perturbations (slightly larger than the threshold for excitations). Following Showalter et al. (Showalter, K.; Noyes, R. M.; Turner, H. J.Am. Chem. Soc. 1979, 101, 7463-69), we used a positively biased silver electrode to release silver ions into a BZ reaction mixture, removing bromide ions and causing an excitation if sufficient bromide was removed. We found (1) a scaling region in which the delay before activation increased linearly as the size of the perturbation decreased, qualitatively consistent with but not fully explained by the Oregonator of Field et al. (Field, R. J.; K?r?s, E.; Noyes, R. M. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1972, 94, 8649-64); (2) evidence for a 10 s oligomerization time scale; and (3) that activations were always delayed until after the end of a pulse of current, with the delay essentially constant for sufficiently long pulses, an effect not seen in simple ODE models but consistent with the anomalously large current apparently required for activation (Showalter, K.; Noyes, R. M. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1976, 98, 3730-31) and explainable by bromide transport. Overall, the BZ system appeared to be well-suited as an experimental prototype, despite its complexity.  相似文献   

18.
We have attempted subpicosecond time-resolved absorption spectroscopy of all-trans-beta-carotene in organic solvents in the 820-1060 nm region and found novel transient absorption features which lived in subpicosecond time scales. A first component that appeared immediately after excitation showed a lifetime of 190 +/- 10 fs in n-hexane in agreement with the 1Bu+ lifetime that had been determined by fluorescence upconversion spectroscopy (195 +/- 10 fs). (Kandori et al. [1994] J. Am. Chem. Soc. 116, 2671-2672.) Therefore, this component is assigned to a transient absorption from the 1Bu+ state.  相似文献   

19.
Nonadiabatic first-principles molecular dynamics simulations have been performed of the photoexcited Watson-Crick guanine-cytosine (GC) DNA base pair in the gas phase and in aqueous solution. An excited state coupled proton-electron transfer (CPET) from G to C along the central hydrogen bond is observed upon excitation of the pipi* state initially localized on G. In the resulting charge transfer state a conical intersection between the excited state and the ground state is easily accessible. Therefore radiationless decay is fast, of the order of 100 fs, followed by a rapid CPET back reaction retrieving the initial Watson-Crick structure. A detailed analysis of the mechanism of nonradiative decay suggests a biexponential behavior in which out-of-plane motion plays a special role for the longer decay component.  相似文献   

20.
While the recognition of cyanuric acid (CA) by melamine (M) and their derivatives has been known to occur in both water and organic solvents for some time, analysis of CA/M assembly in water has not been reported (Ranganathan, A.; Pedireddi, V. R.; Rao, C. N. R. J. Am. Chem. Soc.1999, 121, 1752-1753; Mathias, J. P.; Simanek, E. E.; Seto, C. T.; Whitesides, G. M. Macromol. Symp.1994, 77, 157-166; Zerkowski, J. A.; MacDonald, J. C.; Seto, C. T.; Wierda, D. A.; Whitesides, G. M. J. Am. Chem. Soc.1994, 116, 2382-2391; Mathias, J. P.; Seto, C. T.; Whitesides, G. M. Polym. Prepr.1993, 34, 92-93; Seto, C. T.; Whitesides, G. M. J. Am. Chem. Soc.1993, 115, 905-916; Zerkowski, J. A.; Seto, C. T.; Whitesides, G. M. J. Am. Chem. Soc.1992, 114, 5473-5475; Seto, C. T.; Whitesides, G. M. J. Am. Chem. Soc.1990, 112, 6409-6411; Wang, Y.; Wei, B.; Wang, Q. J. Chem. Cryst.1990, 20, 79-84; ten Cate, M. G. J.; Huskens, J.; Crego-Calama, M.; Reinhoudt, D. N. Chem.-Eur. J.2004, 10, 3632-3639). We have examined assembly of CA/M, as well as assembly of soluble trivalent CA and M derivatives (TCA/TM), in aqueous solvent, using a combination of solution phase NMR, isothermal titration and differential scanning calorimetry (ITC/DSC), cryo-transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM), and synthetic chemistry. While the parent heterocycles coprecipitate in water, the trivalent system displays more controlled and cooperative assembly that occurs at lower concentrations than the parent and yields a stable nanoparticle suspension. The assembly of both parent and trivalent systems is rigorously 1:1 and proceeds as an exothermic, proton-transfer coupled process in neutral pH water. Though CA and M are considered canonical hydrogen-bonding motifs in organic solvents, we find that their assembly in water is driven in large part by enthalpically favorable surface-area burial, similar to what is observed with nucleic acid recognition. There are currently few synthetic systems capable of robust molecular recognition in water that do not rely on native recognition motifs, possibly due to an incomplete understanding of recognition processes in water. This study establishes a detailed conceptual framework for considering CA/M heterocycle recognition in water which enables the future design of molecular recognition systems that function in water.  相似文献   

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