Ultrafast strong-field dissociation of vinyl bromide: An attosecond transient absorption spectroscopy and non-adiabatic molecular dynamics study
Author(s) -
Florian Rott,
Maurizio Reduzzi,
Thomas Schnappinger,
Yuki Kobayashi,
Kristina F. Chang,
Henry Timmers,
Daniel M. Neumark,
Regina de VivieRiedle,
Stephen R. Leone
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
structural dynamics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.415
H-Index - 29
ISSN - 2329-7778
DOI - 10.1063/4.0000102
Subject(s) - ultrafast laser spectroscopy , spectroscopy , adiabatic process , absorption spectroscopy , molecular dynamics , atomic physics , attosecond , dissociation (chemistry) , ab initio quantum chemistry methods , vinyl bromide , conical intersection , chemistry , molecular physics , extreme ultraviolet , chemical physics , molecule , ultrashort pulse , physics , computational chemistry , potential energy , optics , laser , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , medicinal chemistry , thermodynamics
Attosecond extreme ultraviolet (XUV) and soft x-ray sources provide powerful new tools for studying ultrafast molecular dynamics with atomic, state, and charge specificity. In this report, we employ attosecond transient absorption spectroscopy (ATAS) to follow strong-field-initiated dynamics in vinyl bromide. Probing the Br M edge allows one to assess the competing processes in neutral and ionized molecular species. Using ab initio non-adiabatic molecular dynamics, we simulate the neutral and cationic dynamics resulting from the interaction of the molecule with the strong field. Based on the dynamics results, the corresponding time-dependent XUV transient absorption spectra are calculated by applying high-level multi-reference methods. The state-resolved analysis obtained through the simulated dynamics and related spectral contributions enables a detailed and quantitative comparison with the experimental data. The main outcome of the interaction with the strong field is unambiguously the population of the first three cationic states, D 1 , D 2 , and D 3 . The first two show exclusively vibrational dynamics while the D 3 state is characterized by an ultrafast dissociation of the molecule via C–Br bond rupture within 100 fs in 50% of the analyzed trajectories. The combination of the three simulated ionic transient absorption spectra is in excellent agreement with the experimental results. This work establishes ATAS in combination with high-level multi-reference simulations as a spectroscopic technique capable of resolving coupled non-adiabatic electronic-nuclear dynamics in photoexcited molecules with sub-femtosecond resolution.
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