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Hydrogen Bond Networks: Structure and Evolution after Hydrogen Bond Breaking
Author(s) -
John B. Asbury,
Tobias Steinel,
M. D. Fayer
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry b
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1520-6106
pISSN - 1520-5207
DOI - 10.1021/jp036600c
Subject(s) - hydrogen bond , chemistry , excited state , relaxation (psychology) , spectroscopy , hydrogen , infrared spectroscopy , diffusion , infrared , chemical physics , photochemistry , atomic physics , molecule , optics , physics , thermodynamics , organic chemistry , psychology , social psychology , quantum mechanics
The nature of hydrogen bonding networks following hydrogen bond breaking is investigated using vibrational echo correlation spectroscopy of the hydroxyl stretch of methanol-OD (MeOD) of MeOD oligomers in CCl4. Using ultrafast (<50 fs) infrared multidimensional stimulated vibrational echo correlation spectroscopy with full phase information, the experiments examine frequency correlation between initially excited OD stretches and their “photoproducts” created by hydrogen bond breaking following vibrational relaxation. The hydrogen bond breaking following vibrational relaxation gives rise to a new species, singly hydrogen bonded MeODs, the photoproduct. The photoproducts give rise to a well-defined spectrally distinct off-diagonal peak in the correlation spectrum. Detailed modeling of this peak is used to measure its spectral diffusion (increased spectral broadening as time increases). A rephasing vibrational echo signal and spectral diffusion can only occur if photoproduct hydroxyl stretch frequencies are h...

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