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The effect of solvent relaxation in the ultrafast time-resolved spectroscopy of solvated benzophenone
Author(s) -
Elena E. Zvereva,
Javier SegarraMartí,
Marco Marazzi,
Johanna Brazard,
Artur Nenov,
Oliver Weingart,
Jérémie Léonard,
Marco Garavelli,
Ivan Rivalta,
Élise Dumont,
Xavier Assfeld,
Stefan Haacke,
Antonio Monari
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
photochemical and photobiological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.699
H-Index - 101
eISSN - 1474-9092
pISSN - 1474-905X
DOI - 10.1039/c7pp00439g
Subject(s) - benzophenone , relaxation (psychology) , intermolecular force , spectroscopy , ultrafast laser spectroscopy , ultrashort pulse , chemical physics , chemistry , femtosecond , vibrational energy relaxation , solvation , molecular dynamics , absorption spectroscopy , excitation , solvent effects , absorption (acoustics) , molecular physics , computational chemistry , solvent , molecule , photochemistry , laser , physics , optics , quantum mechanics , organic chemistry , psychology , social psychology
Benzophenone (BP) despite its relatively simple molecular structure is a paradigmatic sensitizer, featuring both photocatalytic and photobiological effects due to its rather complex photophysical properties. In this contribution we report an original theoretical approach to model realistic, ultra-fast spectroscopy data, which requires describing intra- and intermolecular energy and structural relaxation. In particular we explicitly simulate time-resolved pump-probe spectra using a combination of state-of-the art hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics dynamics to treat relaxation and vibrational effects. The comparison with experimental transient absorption data demonstrates the efficiency and accuracy of our approach. Furthermore the explicit inclusion of the solvent, water for simulation and methanol for experiment, allows us, despite the inherent different behavior of the two, to underline the role played by the H-bonding relaxation in the first hundreds of femtoseconds after optical excitation. Finally we predict for the first time the two-dimensional electronic spectrum (2DES) of BP taking into account the vibrational effects and hence modelling partially symmetric and asymmetric ultrafast broadening.

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