The photodissociation reaction of the molecular iodine:arene charge-transfer (CT) complex into an iodine atom and an iodine atom-arene fragment has been investigated using femtosecond pump-probe, resonance Raman, and molecular dynamics simulations. In the condensed phase the reaction proceeds on a time scale of less than 25 fs, in sharp contrast to the gas phase where the excited state lifetime of the complex is about 1 ps. Since little CT resonance enhancement is found in Raman studies on the I-2-stretch vibration, it is concluded that rapid curve crossing occurs from the CT state to a dissociative surface. Of particular interest is the finding that the polarization anisotropy of the iodine atom:arene (I:ar) photoproduct decays on a time scale of 350 fs both in pure arene solvents as well as in mixed arene/cyclohexane solutions. This latter finding rules out that secondary I:ar complex formation is the main cause of this ultrafast depolarization effect. The initial polarization anisotropy is found to be similar to 0.12 in pure mesitylene and similar to 0.34 in mixed mesitylene/cyclohexane solutions. Semiempirical configuration-interaction calculations show that, except for the axial CT complex, the transition dipole is aligned almost parallel to the normal of the arene plane. The oscillator strength of the CT transition is found to be maximal in the oblique conformation with the I-2 molecule positioned at an angle of about 30 degrees with respect to the arene normal. This iodine angular dependence of the oscillator strength leads to photoselection of bent I-2:ar complexes in pump-probe experiments. Molecular dynamics simulations confirm earlier findings that the I-2:benzene complex is a fragile entity and that it persists only for a few hundred femtoseconds. These simulations also provide the proper time scale for the decay of the polarization anisotropy. The fact that the photoproduct experiences a substantial torque in the dissociation process explains the absence of a cage effect in this reaction.

Photodissociation dynamics of the iodine-arene charge-transfer complex / E. Lenderink;K. Duppen;F. P. X.;J. Mavri;R. Torre;D. A. Wiersma. - In: THE JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0022-3654. - STAMPA. - 100:(1996), pp. 7822-7831. [10.1021/jp953325o]

Photodissociation dynamics of the iodine-arene charge-transfer complex

TORRE, RENATO;
1996

Abstract

The photodissociation reaction of the molecular iodine:arene charge-transfer (CT) complex into an iodine atom and an iodine atom-arene fragment has been investigated using femtosecond pump-probe, resonance Raman, and molecular dynamics simulations. In the condensed phase the reaction proceeds on a time scale of less than 25 fs, in sharp contrast to the gas phase where the excited state lifetime of the complex is about 1 ps. Since little CT resonance enhancement is found in Raman studies on the I-2-stretch vibration, it is concluded that rapid curve crossing occurs from the CT state to a dissociative surface. Of particular interest is the finding that the polarization anisotropy of the iodine atom:arene (I:ar) photoproduct decays on a time scale of 350 fs both in pure arene solvents as well as in mixed arene/cyclohexane solutions. This latter finding rules out that secondary I:ar complex formation is the main cause of this ultrafast depolarization effect. The initial polarization anisotropy is found to be similar to 0.12 in pure mesitylene and similar to 0.34 in mixed mesitylene/cyclohexane solutions. Semiempirical configuration-interaction calculations show that, except for the axial CT complex, the transition dipole is aligned almost parallel to the normal of the arene plane. The oscillator strength of the CT transition is found to be maximal in the oblique conformation with the I-2 molecule positioned at an angle of about 30 degrees with respect to the arene normal. This iodine angular dependence of the oscillator strength leads to photoselection of bent I-2:ar complexes in pump-probe experiments. Molecular dynamics simulations confirm earlier findings that the I-2:benzene complex is a fragile entity and that it persists only for a few hundred femtoseconds. These simulations also provide the proper time scale for the decay of the polarization anisotropy. The fact that the photoproduct experiences a substantial torque in the dissociation process explains the absence of a cage effect in this reaction.
1996
100
7822
7831
E. Lenderink;K. Duppen;F. P. X.;J. Mavri;R. Torre;D. A. Wiersma
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Iodine-JPC-1996.pdf

Accesso chiuso

Tipologia: Versione finale referata (Postprint, Accepted manuscript)
Licenza: Tutti i diritti riservati
Dimensione 416.4 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
416.4 kB Adobe PDF   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/772174
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 38
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 34
social impact