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1.
The addition of organometallic reagents to cyclic ketones bearing stannyl groups at an appropriate distance to the carbonyl group occurs with a high level of stereocontrol, giving alcohols resulting from attack of the nucleophile syn to the tin center. This remarkable remote control is a consequence of the anchoring of the organometallic reagent by the tin and carbonyl groups. The degree of selectivity observed depends on the spatial distance between the carbonyl group and the tin center. (Z)-beta-Stannylvinyl ketones (Sn/CO separation: 5 bonds) react with organolithium reagents, showing a high degree of stereocontrol. On the contrary, the analogous ketones with E stereochemistry do not show selectivity at all. In the case of beta-stannyl ketones (Sn/CO separation: 3 bonds), the long distance between the tin center and the carbonyl group does not favor selective addition except when allyllithium derivatives are used. A chelation-controlled pathway assisted by the three-carbon chain of the allyl anion, which compensates the distance between tin and carbonyl groups, has been proposed. The selectivity found for ketones 34-36 (Sn/CO separation: 4 bonds) depends on their structure and varies with the hybridization of the carbon atom linked to the trialkyltin group. Deuterium labeling experiments as well as ab initio molecular-orbital analysis support the mechanistic hypothesis of an intramolecular delivery. Grignard reagents are less selective than organolithium compounds.  相似文献   

2.
We are utilizing recent advances in ultrafast laser technology and recent discoveries in optimal shaping of laser pulses to significantly enhance the stand-off detection of explosives via control of molecular processes at the quantum level. Optimal dynamic detection of explosives is a method whereby the selectivity and sensitivity of any of a number of nonlinear spectroscopic methods are enhanced using optimal shaping of ultrafast laser pulses. We have recently investigated the Gerchberg–Saxton algorithm as a method to very quickly estimate the optimal spectral phase for a given analyte from its spontaneous Raman spectrum and the ultrafast laser pulse spectrum. Results for obtaining selective coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectra (CARS) for an analyte in a mixture, while suppressing the CARS signals from the other mixture components, are compared for the Gerchberg–Saxton method versus previously obtained results from closed-loop machine-learning optimization using evolutionary strategies.  相似文献   

3.
This article presents a new perspective on laser control based on insights into the effect of spectral phase on nonlinear optical processes. Gaining this understanding requires the systematic evaluation of the molecular response as a function of a series of pre-defined accurately shaped laser pulses. The effort required is rewarded with robust, highly reproducible, results. This approach is illustrated by results on selective two-photon excitation microscopy of biological samples, where higher signal and less photobleaching damage are achieved by accurate phase measurement and elimination of high-order phase distortions from the ultrashort laser pulses. A similar systematic approach applied to laser control of gas phase chemical reactions reveals surprising general trends. Molecular fragmentation pattern is found to be dependent on phase shaping. Differently shaped pulses with similar pulse duration have been found to produce similar fragmentation patterns. This implies that any single parameter that is proportional to the pulse duration, such as second harmonic generation intensity, allows us to predict the molecular fragmentation pattern within the experimental noise. This finding, is illustrated here for a series of isomers. Bond selectivity, coherent photochemistry and their applications are discussed in light of results from these systematic studies.  相似文献   

4.
Symmetry breaking and control of bond selective dissociation can be achieved by means of ultrashort few-cycle-infrared (IR) and ultraviolet (UV) laser pulses. The mechanism is demonstrated for the oriented model system, FHF-, by nuclear wave packets which are propagated on two-dimensional potential energy surfaces calculated at the QCISD/d-aug-cc-pVTZ level of theory. The IR laser pulse is optimized to drive the wave packet coherently along alternate bonds. Next, a well-timed ultrashort UV laser pulse excites the wave packet, via photodetachment of the negative bihalide anion, to the bond selective domain of the neutral surface close to the transition state. The excited wave packet is then biased to evolve along the pre-excited bond toward the target product channel, rather than bifurcating in equal amounts. Comparison of the vibrational frequencies obtained within our model with harmonic and experimental frequencies indicates substantial anharmonicities and mode couplings which impose restrictions on the mechanism in the domain of ultrashort laser fields. Extended applications of the method to randomly oriented or to asymmetric systems XHY- are also discussed, implying the control of product directionality and competing bond-breaking.  相似文献   

5.
The importance of the ro-vibrational state energies on the ability to produce high fidelity binary shaped laser pulses for quantum logic gates is investigated. The single frequency 2-qubit ACNOT(1) and double frequency 2-qubit NOT(2) quantum gates are used as test cases to examine this behaviour. A range of diatomics is sampled. The laser pulses are optimized using a genetic algorithm for binary (two amplitude and two phase parameter) variation on a discretized frequency spectrum. The resulting trends in the fidelities were attributed to the intrinsic molecular properties and not the choice of method: a discretized frequency spectrum with genetic algorithm optimization. This is verified by using other common laser pulse optimization methods (including iterative optimal control theory), which result in the same qualitative trends in fidelity. The results differ from other studies that used vibrational state energies only. Moreover, appropriate choice of diatomic (relative ro-vibrational state arrangement) is critical for producing high fidelity optimized quantum logic gates. It is also suggested that global phase alignment imposes a significant restriction on obtaining high fidelity regions within the parameter search space. Overall, this indicates a complexity in the ability to provide appropriate binary laser pulse control of diatomics for molecular quantum computing.  相似文献   

6.
A time-dependent approach to study phase control over molecular photoabsorption, provided by intense laser pulses, is elaborate. The method allows for the decay linewidth of molecular states and frequency bandwidth of the controlling laser field, and can be applied in weak and strong laser fields where the perturbation theory is invalid. It is shown that a frequency mismatch between the fundamental laser wave and its third harmonic can destroy control. For the example of the one-photon versus three-photon control a simple picture of interference from two monochromatic absorption pathways is not enough to explain phase control and one needs to consider a nonlinear temporal interference of multiquantum transitions. In the perturbation-theory limit an elegant generalization of the famous Shapiro-Hepburn-Brumer equation for the one-photon versus three-photon control is derived. Various numerical calculations illustrate the dependence of phase control on molecular linewidth, fundamental laser wavelength, pulse duration, and peak intensity. It is obtained, that the one-photon versus three-photon control is productive if the molecular state populations, individually produced by each laser wave, have beats of approximately the same frequency. The calculations demonstrate that an enough intense optical pulse can suppress molecular decay and may be used in order to keep stable the state population of a decaying molecule for a long time. The available experimental results for the one-photon versus three-photon control over simple and large polyatomic molecules are analyzed and recommendations for the experimental improvement of control are formulated.  相似文献   

7.
We investigate the control of state-selective population transfer in the THz spectral range generated by sub-one-cycle pulse excitation. To this end we developed a zero-net-force modification of the optimal control algorithm which allows us to extend the algorithm into the ultrashort pulse domain. By combining the analysis of the control landscapes and that of optimal control theory, we were able to formulate a general mechanism suitable for laser control by ultrashort pulses. The strategy consists of a superposition of two pi-pulses with carrier envelope phases of phi = pi/2. The first pulse is effectively in resonance with the targeted transition, while the second one, fired at around the minimum of the first pulse second lobe, removes leaking to the dipole-coupled background state. To compensate for the pulses ultrashort duration, the carrier frequencies of both pulses are red-shifted from the spectroscopic resonance.  相似文献   

8.
9.
《Chemphyschem》2003,4(5):418-438
Active control of chemical reactions on a microscopic (molecular) level, that is, the selective breaking or making of chemical bonds, is an old dream. However, conventional control agents used in chemical synthesis are macroscopic variables such as temperature, pressure or concentration, which gives no direct access to the quantum‐mechanical reaction pathway. In quantum control, by contrast, molecular dynamics are guided with specifically designed light fields. Thus it is possible to efficiently and selectively reach user‐defined reaction channels. In the last years, experimental techniques were developed by which many breakthroughs in this field were achieved. Femtosecond laser pulses are manipulated in so‐called pulse shapers to generate electric field profiles which are specifically adapted to a given quantum system and control objective. The search for optimal fields is guided by an automated learning loop, which employs direct feedback from experimental output. Thereby quantum control over gas‐phase as well as liquid‐phase femtochemical processes has become possible. In this review, we first discuss the theoretical and experimental background for many of the recent experiments treated in the literature. Examples from our own research are then used to illustrate several fundamental and practical aspects in gas‐phase as well as liquid‐phase quantum control. Some additional technological applications and developments are also described, such as the automated optimization of the output from commercial femtosecond laser systems, or the control over the polarization state of light on an ultrashort timescale. The increasing number of successful implementations of adaptive learning techniques points at the great versatility of computer‐guided optimization methods. The general approach to active control of light–matter interaction has also applications in many other areas of modern physics and related disciplines.  相似文献   

10.
Femtochemistry is about the investigation and control of ultrafast elementary molecular dynamics, which are the basis of every chemical reaction. The processes finally resulting in breaking of chemical bonds or molecular structure changes take place on a time scale of only femto to picoseconds. Solely femtosecond laser pulses are fast enough to resolve these fast processes. Different techniques were developed, which make use of a combination of femtosecond pulses having a relative temporal delay, in order to get access to the dynamics even in complex molecules. The knowledge of the elementary processes allows for a better understanding of the reaction mechanisms and their dependence on environmental conditions. The interaction with the molecules even before the final reaction path is entered, opens up new exciting possibilities for the control of chemical processes. A specific manipulation of the molecular dynamics using adapted pulse shapes appears to be realistic also for complex reactions and systems. The evolutionary optimization strategies, which exploit the experimental results as feedback, make selective chemistry come true even without knowledge of all system parameters.  相似文献   

11.
This paper discusses different routes to gaining insight from closed loop learning control experiments. We focus on the role of the basis in which pulse shapes are encoded and the algorithmic search is performed. We demonstrate that a physically motivated, nonlinear basis change can reduce the dimensionality of the phase space to one or two degrees of freedom. The dependence of the control goal on the most important degrees of freedom can then be mapped out in detail, leading toward a better understanding of the control mechanism. We discuss simulations and experiments in selective molecular fragmentation using shaped ultrafast laser pulses.  相似文献   

12.
The authors propose a new approach to vibration spectroscopy based on the coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering of broadband ultrashort laser pulses. The proposed method reveals both the amplitude and the phase of molecular vibrations by utilizing the cross-correlation frequency resolved optical gating (XFROG) technique. The spectrum of the anti-Stokes pulse is measured as a function of the time delay between the laser-induced molecular vibrations and a well characterized broadband femtosecond probe pulse. The iterative XFROG algorithm provides a simultaneous complete characterization of molecular vibrations both in frequency and time domains with high resolution. They demonstrate experimentally the feasibility of the proposed method and show one of its potential applications in disentangling the time behavior of a mixture of vibrationally excited molecules. The technique of femtosecond pulse shaping is used for further improvement of accuracy and stability against noise.  相似文献   

13.
The capabilities of a new system for coherent control—intense terahertz light pulses acting on trapped, gas phase D3O+ molecules—are investigated using realistic molecular and pulse parameters. Computer simulations show that a set of three shaped pulses can be used to perform four level (two qubit) quantum computational gates on the inversion–rotation energy levels and read-out the result using degenerate four-wave mixing. Two pulse shaping techniques are employed, one directly shaping a terahertz pulse, and another shaping a visible laser pulse that is rectified by a terahertz antenna. Both are found to be effective for control. Methods for initializing the inversion–rotation wavepacket, making the pulse robust against power variations, maximizing its fidelity to a unitary gate transformation and addressing limitations of energy level connectivity are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of laser noise on the dynamics of simple quantum systems is analyzed. An anharmonic ladder is chosen for illustration and several pulses are obtained that optimize the yield of a quantum transition by constraining the laser parameters. The following models of laser noise are introduced: Amplitude white noise, phase white noise, frequency white noise and shot-to-shot static noise in the different pulse parameters. It is shown that the optimal pulses are robust to white amplitude noise, since the system acts as a dynamical filter. White phase noise affects the optimal pulses in a similar way by reducing the pulse area. This effect can be easily compensated for by pulse amplitude rescaling, up to a high level of noise. White frequency noise reduces the pulse area and induces spectral broadening, more strongly affecting the high frequency components. It can be partially compensated for by amplitude rescaling. The effects of static noise in the parameters cannot be easily corrected. It is shown that optimal pulses that drive n-photon transitions become more sensitive to noise in the amplitude and less sensitive to noise in the frequency as n increases. The effects of noise in the relative phase rapidly become constant for a large number of interfering pathways.  相似文献   

15.
We report quantum dynamical simulations for the laser controlled isomerization of 1-(2-cis-fluoroethenyl)-2-fluorobenzene based on one-dimensional electronic ground and excited state potentials obtained from (TD)DFT calculations. 1-(2-cis-fluoroethenyl)-2-fluorobenzene supports two chiral and one achiral atropisomers, the latter being the most stable isomer at room temperature. Using a linearly polarized IR laser pulse the molecule is excited to an internal rotation around its chiral axis, i.e. around the C-C single bond between phenyl ring and ethenyl group, changing the molecular chirality. A second linearly polarized laser pulse stops the torsion to prepare the desired enantiomeric form of the molecule. This laser control allows the selective switching between the achiral and either the left- or right-handed form of the molecule. Once the chirality is "switched on" linearly polarized UV laser pulses allow the selective change of the chirality using the electronic excited state as intermediate state.  相似文献   

16.
Femtosecond time-resolved coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (fs-CARS) gives access to ultrafast molecular dynamics. However, the gain of the temporal resolution entails a poor spectral resolution due to the inherent spectral width of the femtosecond excitation pulses. Modifications of the phase shape of one of the exciting pulses results in dramatic changes of the mode distribution reflected in coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectra. A feedback-controlled optimization of specific modes making use of phase and/or amplitude modulation of the pump laser pulse is applied to selectively influence the anti-Stokes signal spectrum. The optimization experiments are performed under electronically nonresonant and resonant conditions. The results are compared and the role of electronic resonances is analyzed. It can be clearly demonstrated that these resonances are of importance for a selective excitation by means of phase and amplitude modulation. The mode selective excitation under nonresonant conditions is determined mainly by the variation of the spectral phase of the laser pulse. Here, the modulation of the spectral amplitudes only has little influence on the mode ratios. In contrast to this, the phase as well as amplitude modulation contributes considerably to the control process under resonant conditions. A careful analysis of the experimental results reveals information about the mechanisms of the mode control, which partially involve molecular dynamics in the electronic states.  相似文献   

17.
The relative yield of the C-O bond breaking with respect to the C-C bond breaking in ethanol cation C2H5OH+ is maximized in intense laser fields (10(13)-10(15) Wcm2) by open-loop and closed-loop optimization procedures. In the open-loop optimization, a train of intense laser pulses are synthesized so that the temporal separation between the first and last pulses becomes 800 fs, and the number and width of the pulses within a train are systematically varied. When the duration of 800 fs is filled with laser fields by increasing the number of pulses or by stretching all pulses in a triple pulse train, the relative yield of the C-O bond breaking becomes significantly large. In the closed-loop optimization using a self-learning algorithm, the four dispersion coefficients or the phases of 128 frequency components of an intense laser pulse are adopted as optimized parameters. From these optimization experiments it is revealed that the yield ratio of the C-O bond breaking is maximized as far as the total duration of the intense laser field reaches as long as approximately 1 ps and that the intermittent disappearance of the laser field within a pulse does not affect the relative yields of the bond breaking pathways.  相似文献   

18.
We present a joint theoretical and experimental study of the maximization of the isotopomer ratio (23)Na(39)K(23)Na(41)K using tailored phase-only as well as amplitude and phase modulated femtosecond laser fields obtained in the framework of optimal control theory and closed loop learning (CLL) technique. A good agreement between theoretically and experimentally optimized pulse shapes is achieved which allows to assign the optimized processes directly to the pulse shapes obtained by the experimental isotopomer selective CLL approach. By analyzing the dynamics induced by the optimized pulses we show that the mechanism involving the dephasing of the wave packets between the isotopomers (23)Na (39)K and (23)Na (41)K on the first excited state is responsible for high isotope selective ionization. Amplitude and phase modulated pulses, moreover, allow to establish the connection between the spectral components of the pulse and corresponding occupied vibronic states. It will be also shown that the leading features of the theoretically shaped pulses are independent from the initial conditions. Since the underlying processes can be assigned to the individual features of the shaped pulses, we show that optimal control can be used as a tool for analysis.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract Experimental studies have recently demonstrated that fluorescence emission can be quenched by laser light pulses from modem high-repetition rate lasers, a phenomenon we call “light quenching.” In this overview article, we describe the possible effects of light quenching on the steady-state and time-resolved intensity and anisotropy of fluorophores. One can imagine two classes of experiments. Light quenching can occur within the single excitation pulse, or light quenching can be accomplished with a second time-delayed quenching pulse. The extent of light quenching depends on the amplitude of the emission spectrum at the quenching wavelength. Different effects are expected for light quenching by a single laser beam (within a single laser pulse) or for a time-delayed quenching pulse. Depending upon the polarization of the light quenching beam, light quenching can decrease or increase the anisotropy. Remarkably, the light quenching can break the usual z-axis symmetry of the excited state population, and the measured anisotropy (or polarization) depends upon whether the observation axis is parallel or perpendicular to the propagation direction of the light quenching beam. The polarization can increase to unity under selected conditions. Quenching with time-delayed light pulses can result in step changes in the intensity or anisotropy, which is predicted to result in oscillations in the frequency-domain intensity and anisotropy decays. These predicted effects of light quenching, including oscillations in the frequency-domain data, were demonstrated to occur using selected fluorophores. The increasing availability and use of pulsed laser sources requires consideration of the possible effects of light quenching and offers the opportunity for a new class of two-pulse or multiple-pulse time-resolved experiments where the sample is prepared by the excitation pulse and subsequent quenching pulses to modify the excited state population, followed by time- or frequency-domain measurement of the optically prepared excited fluorophores.  相似文献   

20.
The optimal control of the vibrational excitation of the hydrogen molecule [Balint-Kurti et al., J. Chem. Phys. 122, 084110 (2005)] utilizing polarization forces is extended to three dimensions. The polarizability of the molecule, to first and higher orders, is accounted for using explicit ab initio calculations of the molecular electronic energy in the presence of an electric field. Optimal control theory is then used to design infrared laser pulses that selectively excite the molecule to preselected vibrational-rotational states. The amplitude of the electric field of the optimized pulses is restricted so that there is no significant ionization during the process, and a new frequency sifting method is used to simplify the frequency spectrum of the pulse. The frequency spectra of the optimized laser pulses for processes involving rotational excitation are more complex than those relating to processes involving only vibrational excitation.  相似文献   

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