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1.
2.
Femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy has been employed to understand the excited state dynamics of [Ru(bpy)(2)Sq](+) (I; bpy is 2,2'-bipyridyl, and Sq is the deprotonated species of the semiquinone form of 1,2-dihydroxy benzene) and its derivatives, a widely studied near-infrared (NIR) active electrochromic dye. Apart from the well-defined dpi(Ru) --> pi(bpy)-based metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) transition bands at approximately 480 nm, this class of molecules generally shows another dpi(Ru) --> pi(Sq)(SOMO)-based intense MLCT band at around 900 nm, which is known to be redox active and bleaches reversibly upon a change in the oxidation state of the coordinated dioxolene moiety. To have better insight into the photoinduced electron transfer dynamics associated with this MLCT transition, detailed investigations have been carried out on exciting this MLCT band at 800 nm. Immediately after photoexcitation, bleach at 900 nm has been observed, whose recovery is found to follow a triexponential function with major contribution from the ultrafast component. This ultrafast component of approximately 220 fs has been ascribed to the S(1) to S(0) internal conversion process. In addition to the bleach, we have detected two transient species absorbing at 730 and 1000 nm with a formation time approximately 220 fs for both species. The excited state lifetimes for these two transient species have been measured to be 1.5 and 11 ps and have been attributed to excited singlet ((1)MLCT) and triplet ((3)MLCT) states, respectively. Transient measurements carried out on the different but analogous derivatives (II and III) have also shown similar recovery dynamics except that the rate for the internal conversion process has increased with the decrease in the S(1) to S(0) energy gap. The observed results are consistent with the energy gap law for nonradiative decay from S(1) to S(0).  相似文献   

3.
Photoinduced excited-state relaxation of trans-3-phenylprop-2-enaldehyde (cinnamaldehyde) and three derivatives was studied in hexane and acetonitrile with the pump-supercontinuum-probe technique. Transient spectra were measured with 50 fs resolution in the range 260-660 nm after S3<--S0 excitation at 288 nm. The early spectra reveal an ultrafast, 0.1-0.5 ps, interchange of intensity between two excited-state absorption (ESA) bands followed by a approximately 3 ps decay of ESA. This behaviour is interpreted with the help of semiempirical calculations, which indicate that the sub-picosecond evolution is consistent with S3-->S1 excited-state relaxation while the picosecond decay should be due to a structural intramolecular rearrangement. The latter may consist of a twist of the phenyl ring and rotation around the C==C bond to a perpendicular conformation which corresponds to the global energy minimum in the S1 state and serves as source for trans and cis isomers in the ground state.  相似文献   

4.
Ultrafast photolysis of p-biphenylyldiazoethane (BDE) produces an excited state of the diazo compound in acetonitrile, cyclohexane, and methanol with lambdamax = 490 nm and lifetimes of less than 300 fs. The decay of the diazo excited state correlates with the growth of singlet carbene absorption at 360 nm. The optical yields of diazo excited states produced by photolysis of p-biphenylyldiazomethane (BDM) and BDE are the same; however, the optical yield of singlet p-biphenylylmethylcarbene (1BpCMe) is 30-40% less than that of p-biphenylylcarbene (1BpCH) in all three solvents. The results are explained by rearrangement in the excited state (RIES) of BDE to form p-vinylbiphenyl (VB) in parallel with extrusion of nitrogen to form 1BpCMe in reduced yield. This interpretation is consistent with product studies (ethanol-OD in cyclohexane) which indicate that there is an approximately 25% yield of VB that is formed by a mechanism that bypasses the relaxed singlet carbene. The decay of 1BpCMe is biexponential, and that of 1BpCH is monoexponential. This is attributed either to efficient relaxation of vibrationally excited 1BpCMe by 1,2 migration of hydrogen to form VB (minor) or to the increased number of low-frequency vibrational modes provided by the methyl group (major). A methyl group retards the rate of intersystem crossing (ISC), relative to a hydrogen atom, and ISC is more rapid in nonpolar solvents. Reaction of 1BpCMe with methanol is much faster than spin equilibration. Both the lifetime of 1BpCMe and 1BpCH are the same in cyclohexane and in cyclohexane-d12. This demonstrates that spin equilibration is faster than reaction of either carbene with the solvent. The lifetimes of 1BpCMe and 1BpCMe-d3 are the same in cyclohexane. This indicates that 1,2 hydrogen migration of 1BpCMe to form VB is slower than spin equilibration in cyclohexane. In acetonitrile, however, the lifetime of 1BpCMe-d3 is 1.5 times longer than that of 1BpCMe in the same solvent. Thus, in acetonitrile, where ISC is slow, the rate of 1,2 hydrogen shift of 1BpCMe is competitive with ISC. In cyclohexene, the lifetime of 1BpCH is shortened relative to that in cyclohexane. The lifetime of 1BpCMe is the same in cyclohexene and cyclohexane. The data indicate that spin relaxation is slow relative to reaction of 1BpCH with neat alkene but that spin relaxation is fast for 1BpCMe relative to reaction with neat cyclohexene.  相似文献   

5.
Ultrafast photolysis of 9-diazofluorene (DAF) produces a broadly absorbing transient within the instrument time resolution (300 fs), which is assigned to an excited state of the diazo compound. The diazo excited state fragments to form fluorenylidene (Fl) in both its lowest energy singlet state (1Fl, 405-430 nm, depending on the solvent) and a higher energy singlet state (370 nm, 1Fl*). The excited singlet carbene has a lifetime of 20.9 ps in acetonitrile and decays to the lower energy singlet state (1Fl), which relaxes to the triplet ground state (3Fl) in acetonitrile, cyclohexane, benzene, and hexafluorobenzene. The equilibrium mixture of singlet and triplet fluorenylidene reacts with these solvents. Singlet fluorenylidene reacts with methanol and cyclohexene in competition with relaxation to 3Fl. One of the reaction products in methanol is the 9-fluorenyl cation. The rate of intersystem crossing (ISC) in hexafluorobenzene and other halogenated solvents is remarkably slow given that carbene ISC rates are generally fastest in nonpolar solvents. An explanation of this effect is advanced.  相似文献   

6.
Ultrafast electronic-vibrational relaxation upon excitation of the singlet charge-transfer b (1)A' state of [Re(L)(CO) 3(bpy)] ( n ) (L = Cl, Br, I, n = 0; L = 4-Et-pyridine, n = 1+) in acetonitrile was investigated using the femtosecond fluorescence up-conversion technique with polychromatic detection. In addition, energies, characters, and molecular structures of the emitting states were calculated by TD-DFT. The luminescence is characterized by a broad fluorescence band at very short times, and evolves to the steady-state phosphorescence spectrum from the a (3)A" state at longer times. The analysis of the data allows us to identify three spectral components. The first two are characterized by decay times tau 1 = 85-150 fs and tau 2 = 340-1200 fs, depending on L, and are identified as fluorescence from the initially excited singlet state and phosphorescence from a higher triplet state (b (3)A"), respectively. The third component corresponds to the long-lived phosphorescence from the lowest a (3)A" state. In addition, it is found that the fluorescence decay time (tau 1) corresponds to the intersystem crossing (ISC) time to the two emissive triplet states. tau 2 corresponds to internal conversion among triplet states. DFT results show that ISC involves electron exchange in orthogonal, largely Re-localized, molecular orbitals, whereby the total electron momentum is conserved. Surprisingly, the measured ISC rates scale inversely with the spin-orbit coupling constant of the ligand L, but we find a clear correlation between the ISC times and the vibrational periods of the Re-L mode, suggesting that the latter may mediate the ISC in a strongly nonadiabatic regime.  相似文献   

7.
The electronic and vibrational structure of beta-carotene's early excited states are examined using femtosecond time-resolved stimulated Raman spectroscopy. The vibrational spectrum of the short-lived ( approximately 160 fs) second excited singlet state (S(2),1B(u) (+))of beta-carotene is obtained. Broad, resonantly enhanced vibrational features are observed at approximately 1100, 1300, and 1650 cm(-1) that decay with a time constant corresponding to the electronic lifetime of S(2). The temporal evolution of the vibrational spectra are consistent with significant population of only two low-lying excited electronic states (1B(u) (+) and 2A(g) (-)) in the ultrafast relaxation pathway of beta-carotene.  相似文献   

8.
Electron photodetachment from the aromatic anion phenolate excited into the π-π* singlet excited state (S(1)) in aqueous solution is studied with ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy with a time resolution of better than 50 fs. Broad-band transient absorption spectra from 300 to 690 nm are recorded. The transient bands are assigned to the solvated electron, the phenoxyl radical, and the phenolate S(1) excited state, and confirmation of these assignments is achieved using both KNO(3) as electron quencher and time-resolved fluorescence to measure singlet excited state dynamics. The phenolate fluorescence lifetime is found to be short (~20 ps) in water, but the fast decay is only in part due to the electron ejection channel from S(1). Using global target analysis, two electron ejection channels are identified, and we propose that both vibrationally hot S(1) state and the relaxed S(1) state are direct precursors for the solvated electron. Therefore, electron ejection is found just to compete with picosecond time scale vibrational relaxation and electronic radiationless decay channels. This contrasts markedly with <100 fs electron detachment processes for inorganic anions.  相似文献   

9.
Femtosecond-to-microsecond broadband transient absorption experiments are reported for Cy(3)PAu(2-naphthyl) (1), (Cy(3)PAu)(2)(2,6-naphthalenediyl) (2), and (Cy(3)PAu)(2)(2,7-naphthalenediyl) (3), where Cy = cyclohexyl. Global and target analyses of the data, based on a sequential kinetic model, reveal four spectral components. These components are assigned to (1) excited state absorption (ESA) of the ligand-centered S(1) state; (2) ESA of a receiver ligand-to-metal or metal-to-ligand charge transfer triplet state (τ(1) ≤ 300 fs); (3) ESA of the vibrationally excited, ligand-centered T(1) state (τ(3) = 7-10 ps); and (4) ESA of the relaxed T(1) state. Intersystem crossing (ISC) occurs in hundreds of femtoseconds, while internal conversion (IC) in the triplet manifold is slow (τ(2) ≈ 2 ps). The relaxed T(1) state shows biphasic decay kinetics in 2 and 3 with lifetimes of hundreds of picoseconds and hundreds of nanoseconds in air-saturated conditions, while only monophasic decay is observed in 1 under identical conditions. The primary decay pathway of the T(1) state is assigned to quenching by O(2), while the secondary channel is tentatively assigned to self-quenching or triplet-triplet annihilation. The ISC rate in 1 is not modulated significantly by the incorporation of a second heavy-atom group effecter. Instead, the position at which the second Au(I)-phosphine group is attached plays a noticeable role in the ISC rate, showing a 3-fold decrease in that of 2 compared to that of 3. The results challenge the conventional view that the rate of IC is larger than that of ISC, lending further support to the emerging kinetic model proposed for other transition-metal complexes. Gold(I) now joins the exclusive group of transition metals known to form organometallic complexes exhibiting excited-state nonequilibrium dynamics.  相似文献   

10.
We have observed the excited-state dynamics of Mo2(O2C-9-anthracene)4 in THF using ultrafast transient UV/vis absorption spectroscopy. Following excitation at 514.5 nm into the metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) state, transient absorption bands of the 1MLCT state appear at 410 and 610 nm. We assign these features to the 1MLCT state, which has a lifetime of approximately 10 ps. The decay of 1MLCT is accompanied by the formation of the triplet 3MLCT state, with an absorption band peaking at 410 nm. Excitation at 347 nm populates directly the ligand-centered (LC) state. From the rise of the 1MLCT band, the lifetime of the 1LC state is estimated to be less than 1 ps.  相似文献   

11.
The primary photophysical and photochemical processes in the photochemistry of 1-acetoxy-2-methoxyanthraquinone (1a) were studied using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Excitation of 1a at 270 nm results in the population of a set of highly excited singlet states. Internal conversion to the lowest singlet npi* excited state, followed by an intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution (IVR) process, proceeds with a time constant of 150 +/- 90 fs. The 1npi* excited state undergoes very fast intersystem crossing (ISC, 11 +/- 1 ps) to form the lowest triplet pipi* excited state which contains excess vibrational energy. The vibrational cooling occurs somewhat faster (4 +/- 1 ps) than ISC. The primary photochemical process, migration of acetoxy group, proceeds on the triplet potential energy surface with a time constant of 220 +/- 30 ps. The transient absorption spectra of the lowest singlet and triplet excited states of 1a, as well as the triplet excited state of the product, 9-acetoxy-2-methoxy-1,10-anthraquinone (2a), were detected. The assignments of the transient absorption spectra were supported by time-dependent DFT calculations of the UV-vis spectra of the proposed intermediates. All of the stationary points for acyl group migration on the triplet and ground state singlet potential energy surfaces were localized, and the influence of the acyl group substitution on the rate constants of the photochemical and thermal processes was analyzed.  相似文献   

12.
A combination of picosecond time-resolved infrared spectroscopy, picosecond transient absorption spectroscopy, and nanosecond flash photolysis was used to elucidate the nature and dynamics of a manifold of the lowest excited states in Pt(phen-NDI)Cl 2 ( 1), where NDI = strongly electron accepting 1,4,5,8-naphthalene-diimide group. 1 is the first example of a Pt (II)-diimine-diimide dyad. UV/vis/IR spectroelectrochemistry and EPR studies of electrochemically generated anions confirmed that the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) in this system is localized on the NDI acceptor group. The lowest allowed electronic transition in Pt(phen-NDI)Cl 2 is charge-transfer-to-diimine of a largely Pt-->phen metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) character. Excitation of 1 in the 355-395 nm range initiates a series of processes which involve excited states with the lifetimes of 0.9 ps ( (1)NDI*), 3 ps ( (3)MLCT), 19 ps (vibrational cooling of "hot" (3)NDI and of "hot" NDI ground state), and 520 mus ( (3)NDI). Excitation of 1 with 395 nm femtosecond laser pulses populates independently the (1)MLCT and the (1)NDI* excited states. A thermodynamically possible decay of the initially populated (1)MLCT to the charge-transfer-to-NDI excited state, [Pt (III)(phen-NDI (-*))Cl 2], is not observed. This finding could be explained by an ultrafast ISC of the (1)MLCT to the (3)MLCT state which lies about 0.4 eV lower in energy than [Pt (III)(phen-NDI (-*))Cl 2]. The predominant decay pathway of the (3)MLCT is a back electron transfer process with approximately 3 ps lifetime, which also causes partial population of the vibrationally hot ground state of the NDI fragment. The decay of the (1)NDI* state in 1 populates vibrationally hot ground state of the NDI, as well as vibrationally hot (3)NDI. The latter relaxes to form (3)NDI state, that is, [Pt(phen- (3)NDI)Cl 2]*, which possesses a remarkably long lifetime for a Pt (II) complex in fluid solution of 520 mus. The IR signature of this excited state includes the nu(CO) bands at 1607 and 1647 cm (-1), which are shifted considerably to lower energies if compared to their ground-state counterparts. The assignment of the vibrational bands is supported by the density-functional theory calculations in CH 2Cl 2. Pt(phen-NDI)Cl 2 acts as a modest photosensitizer of singlet oxygen.  相似文献   

13.
The excited-state dynamics of a transition metal complex, tris(2,2'-bipyridine)ruthenium(II), [Ru(bpy)(3)](2+), has been investigated using femtosecond fluorescence upconversion spectroscopy. The relaxation dynamics in these molecules is of great importance in understanding the various ultrafast processes related to interfacial electron transfer, especially in semiconductor nanoparticles. Despite several experimental and theoretical efforts, direct observation of a Franck-Condon singlet excited state in this molecule was missing. In this study, emission from the Franck-Condon excited singlet state of [Ru(bpy)(3)](2+) has been observed for the first time, and its lifetime has been estimated to be 40 +/- 15 fs. Biexponential decays with a fast rise component observed at longer wavelengths indicated the existence of more than one emitting state in the system. From a detailed data analysis, it has been proposed that, on excitation at 410 nm, crossover from higher excited (1)(MLCT) states to the vibrationally hot triplet manifold occurs with an intersystem crossing time constant of 40 +/- 15 fs. Mixing of the higher levels in the triplet state with the singlet state due to strong spin-orbit coupling is proposed. This enhances the radiative rate constant, k(r), of the vibrationally hot states within the triplet manifold, facilitating the upconversion of the emitted photons. The vibrationally excited triplet, which is emissive, undergoes vibrational cooling with a decay time in the range of 0.56-1.3 ps and relaxes to the long-lived triplet state. The results on the relaxation dynamics of the higher excited states in [Ru(bpy)(3)](2+) are valuable in explaining the role of nonequilibrated higher excited sensitizer states of transition metal complexes in the electron injection and other ultrafast processes.  相似文献   

14.
The excited-state dynamics and photochemistry of [Re(R)(CO)3(dmb)] (R=Me, Et); dmb=4,4'-dimethyl-2,2'-bipyridine) in CH2Cl2 have been studied by time-resolved visible absorption spectroscopy on a broad time scale ranging from approximately 400 fs to a few microseconds, with emphasis on the femtosecond and picosecond dynamics. It was found that the optically prepared Franck-Condon 1MLCT (singlet metal-to-ligand charge transfer) excited state of [Re(R)(CO)3(dmb)] undergoes femtosecond branching between two pathways (< or =400 fs for R=Me; approximately 800 fs for R=Et). For both methyl and ethyl complexes, evolution along one pathway leads to homolysis of the Re-R bond via a 3SBLCT (triplet sigma-bond-to-ligand charge transfer) excited state, from which [Re(S)(CO)3(dmb)]* and R* radicals are formed. The other pathway leads to an inherently unreactive 3MLCT state. For [Re(Me)(CO)3(dmb)], the 3MLCT state lies lowest in energy and decays exclusively to the ground state with a lifetime of approximately 35 ns, thereby acting as an excitation energy trap. The reactive 3SBLCT state is higher in energy. The quantum yield (0.4 at 293 K) of the radical formation is determined by the branching ratio between the two pathways. [Re(Et)(CO)3(dmb)] behaves differently: branching of the Franck-Condon state between two pathways still occurs, but the 3MLCT excited state lies above the dissociative 3SBLCT state and can decay into it. This shortens the 3MLCT lifetime to 213 ps in CH2Cl2 or 83 ps in CH3CN. Once populated, the 3SBLCT state evolves toward radical photoproducts [Re(S)(CO)3(dmb)]* and Et*. Thus, population of the 3MLCT excited state of [Re(Et)(CO)3(dmb)] provides a second, delayed pathway to homolysis. Hence, the quantum yield is unity. The photochemistry and excited-state dynamics of [Re(R)(CO)3(dmb)] (R=Me, Et) complexes are explained in terms of the relative ordering of the Franck-Condon, 3MLCT, and 3SBLCT states in the region of vertical excitation and along the Re-R reaction coordinate. A qualitative potential energy diagram is proposed.  相似文献   

15.
Lifetimes of the lowest excited singlet (S1) electronic states of various derivatives of the pyrimidine nucleobase cytosine (Cyt) were measured by the femtosecond transient absorption technique. The bases were excited in room-temperature aqueous solution at 265 nm using approximately 200 fs pump pulses from a titanium-sapphire laser system. The decay of excited-state absorption (ESA) at visible probe wavelengths was used to determine the S1 lifetimes of a variety of modified Cyt compounds at different pH values by global fitting. Identical lifetimes were observed for Cyt and cytidine (Cyd) within experimental uncertainty, but ESA by the ribonucleoside was considerably stronger, suggesting that the ribose group increases the oscillator strength of the S1 --> SN transition. The S1 lifetime of the important minor base 5-methylcytosine (m5Cyt) is 7.2 +/- 0.4 ps at pH 6.8. The same lifetime was measured for the ribonucleoside 5-methylcytidine, but sugar substitution again increased the strength of the ESA signal. Protonation of Cyd and m5Cyt at low pH led to a modest decrease in their S1 lifetimes. On the other hand, deprotonation of Cyt and m5Cyt significantly increased the lifetime of their respective S1 states. These trends support the intermediacy of the n,pi* state localized on the carbonyl oxygen in the nonradiative decay mechanism of Cyt. Longer S1 lifetimes were observed for 5-fluorocytosine and N4-acetylcytosine. Collectively, these results illustrate the great potential of femtosecond laser spectroscopy for investigating excited-state dynamics in DNA and DNA components.  相似文献   

16.
The excited state dynamics of polycrystalline tetracene films are studied using femtosecond transient absorption in combination with picosecond fluorescence, continuing work reported in an earlier paper [J. J. Burdett, A. M. Muller, D. Gosztola, and C. J. Bardeen, J. Chem. Phys. 133, 144506 (2010)]. A study of the intensity dependence of the singlet state decay is conducted to understand the origins of the discrepancy between the broadband transient absorption and fluorescence experiments seen previously. High-sensitivity single channel transient absorption experiments allow us to compare the transient absorption dynamics to the fluorescence dynamics measured at identical laser fluences. At high excitation densities, an exciton-exciton annihilation rate constant of ~1 × 10(-8) cm(3) s(-1) leads to rapid singlet decays, but at excitation densities of 2 × 10(17) cm(-3) or less the kinetics of the transient absorption match those of the fluorescence. At these lower excitation densities, both measurements confirm that the initially excited singlet state relaxes with a decay time of 80 ± 3 ps, not 9.2 ps as claimed in the earlier paper. In order to investigate the origin of the singlet decay, the wavelength-resolved fluorescence dynamics were measured at 298 K, 77 K, and 4 K. A high-energy J-type emitting species undergo a rapid (~100 ps) decay at all temperatures, while at 77 K and 4 K additional species with H-type and J-type emission lineshapes have much longer lifetimes. A global analysis of the wavelength-dependent decays shows that the initial ~100 ps decay occurs to a dark state and not via energy transfer to lower energy bright states. Varying the excitation wavelength from 400 nm to 510 nm had no effect on the fast decay, suggesting that there is no energy threshold for the initial singlet relaxation. The presence of different emitting species at different temperatures means that earlier interpretations of the fluorescence behavior in terms of one singlet state that is short-lived due to singlet fission at high temperatures but long-lived at lower temperatures are probably too simplistic. The presence of a rapid singlet decay at all temperatures indicates that the initially created J-type singlet exciton decays to an intermediate that only produces free triplets (and delayed fluorescence) at high temperatures.  相似文献   

17.
Meso-tetra(hydroxyphenyl)chlorin (m-THPC) is a new photosensitizer developed for potential use in photodynamic therapy (PDT) for cancer treatment. In PDT, the accepted mechanism of tumor destruction involves the formation of excited singlet oxygen via intermolecular energy transfer from the excited triplet-state dye to the ground triplet-state oxygen. Femtosecond transient absorption measurements are reported here for the excited singlet state dynamics of m-THPC in solution. The observed early time kinetics were best fit using a triple exponential function with time constants of 350 fs, 80 ps and > or = 3.3 ns. The fastest decay (350 fs) was attributed to either internal conversion from S2 to S1 or vibrational relaxation in S2. Multichannel time-resolved absorption and emission spectroscopies were also used to characterize the excited singlet and triplet states of the dye on nanosecond to microsecond time scales at varying concentrations of oxygen. The nanosecond time-resolved absorption data were fit with a double exponential with time constants of 14 ns and 250 ns in ambient air, corresponding to lifetimes of the S1 and T1 states, respectively. The decay of the T1 state varied linearly with oxygen concentration, from which the intrinsic decay rate constant, ki, of 1.5 x 10(6) s-1 and the biomolecular collisional quenching constant, kc, of 1.7 x 10(9) M-1 s-1 were determined. The lifetime of the S1 state of 10 ns was confirmed by fluorescence measurements. It was found to be independent of oxygen concentration and longer than lifetimes of other photosensitizers.  相似文献   

18.
The DNA base adenine and four monomethylated adenines were studied in solution at room temperature by femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy. Transient absorption at visible probe wavelengths was used to directly observe relaxation of the lowest excited singlet state (S(1) state) populated by a UV pump pulse. In H(2)O, transient absorption signals from adenine decay biexponentially with lifetimes of 0.18 +/- 0.03 ps and 8.8 +/- 1.2 ps. In contrast, signals from monomethylated adenines decay monoexponentially. The S(1) lifetimes of 1-, 3-, and 9-methyladenine are similar to one another and are all below 300 fs, while 7-methyladenine has a significantly longer lifetime (tau = 4.23 +/- 0.13 ps). On this basis, the biexponential signal of adenine is assigned to an equilibrium mixture of the 7H- and 9H-amino tautomers. Excited-state absorption (ESA) by 9-methyladenine is 50% stronger than by 7-methyladenine. Assuming that ESA by the corresponding tautomers of adenine is unchanged, we estimate the population of 7H-adenine in H(2)O at room temperature to be 22 +/- 4% (estimated standard deviation). To understand how the environment affects nonradiative decay, we performed the first solvent-dependent study of nucleobase dynamics on the ultrafast time scale. In acetonitrile, both lowest energy tautomers of adenine are present in roughly similar proportions as in water. The lifetimes of the 9-substituted adenines depend somewhat more sensitively on the solvent than those of the 7-substituted adenines. Transient signals for adenine in H(2)O and D(2)O are identical. These solvent effects strongly suggest that excited-state tautomerization is not an important nonradiative decay pathway. Instead, the data are most consistent with electronic energy relaxation due to state crossings between the optically prepared (1)pipi* state and one or more (1)npi* states and the electronic ground state. The pattern of lifetimes measured for the monomethylated adenines suggests a special role for the (1)npi* state associated with the N7 electron lone pair.  相似文献   

19.
Femto- to picosecond excited-state dynamics of the complexes [Re(L)(CO)(3)(N,N)](n) (N,N = bpy, phen, 4,7-dimethyl-phen (dmp); L = Cl, n = 0; L = imidazole, n = 1+) were investigated using fluorescence up-conversion, transient absorption in the 650-285 nm range (using broad-band UV probe pulses around 300 nm) and picosecond time-resolved IR (TRIR) spectroscopy in the region of CO stretching vibrations. Optically populated singlet charge-transfer (CT) state(s) undergo femtosecond intersystem crossing to at least two hot triplet states with a rate that is faster in Cl (~100 fs)(-1) than in imidazole (~150 fs)(-1) complexes but essentially independent of the N,N ligand. TRIR spectra indicate the presence of two long-lived triplet states that are populated simultaneously and equilibrate in a few picoseconds. The minor state accounts for less than 20% of the relaxed excited population. UV-vis transient spectra were assigned using open-shell time-dependent density functional theory calculations on the lowest triplet CT state. Visible excited-state absorption originates mostly from mixed L;N,N(?-) → Re(II) ligand-to-metal CT transitions. Excited bpy complexes show the characteristic sharp near-UV band (Cl, 373 nm; imH, 365 nm) due to two predominantly ππ*(bpy(?-)) transitions. For phen and dmp, the UV excited-state absorption occurs at ~305 nm, originating from a series of mixed ππ* and Re → CO;N,N(?-) MLCT transitions. UV-vis transient absorption features exhibit small intensity- and band-shape changes occurring with several lifetimes in the 1-5 ps range, while TRIR bands show small intensity changes (≤5 ps) and shifts (~1 and 6-10 ps) to higher wavenumbers. These spectral changes are attributable to convoluted electronic and vibrational relaxation steps and equilibration between the two lowest triplets. Still slower changes (≥15 ps), manifested mostly by the excited-state UV band, probably involve local-solvent restructuring. Implications of the observed excited-state behavior for the development and use of Re-based sensitizers and probes are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
[Pt(0)(binap)(2)] (binap = 2,2'-bis(diphenylphosphino)-1,1'-binaphthyl) is found to exhibit a luminescence from metal-to-ligand charge transfer state (MLCT) with a quantum yield of 0.12 and a lifetime of 1.2 micros in toluene at an ambient temperature. Prompt fluorescence with a quantum yield of 1.6 x 10(-)(4) is observed by means of a picosecond time-correlated single photon counting technique. The spectrum of the steady-state luminescence is almost identical to that of the prompt fluorescence, indicating that the intense luminescence is mainly delayed fluorescence from thermally activated (1)MLCT. The analysis of the temperature-dependent emission indicates that the energy difference between the (1)MLCT and (3)MLCT is 1.15 x 10(3) cm(-)(1). The lifetime of the prompt fluorescence is determined to be 3.2 ps from the decay of stimulated emission overlapped on subpicosecond transient absorption spectra. The lifetime of the (1)MLCT is much longer than expected from the large spin-orbit coupling constant of 5d (Pt) electrons (4000 cm(-)(1)). Theoretical analysis based on density functional theory reveals that structural distortion in the MLCT states causes large energy splitting between HOMO and HOMO - 1, which prevents a very fast ISC induced by strong spin-orbit interactions between these orbitals. The relatively slow ISC is therefore induced by weak spin-orbit interactions (ca. 50 cm(-)(1)) between ligand-centered molecular orbitals. Theoretical calculations indicate that the phosphorescence observed at lower temperatures is due to intensity borrowing from 4(1)B(2) --> GS transition. However, the large energy difference between HOMO and HOMO - 2 reduces the extent of mixing between the lowest (3)MLCT and 4(1)B(2) due to spin-orbit interaction, thereby decreasing the radiative rate of the phosphorescence.  相似文献   

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