Watching coherent molecular structural dynamics during photoreaction: beyond kinetic description

A deep understanding of molecular photo-transformations is challenging because of the complex interaction between the configurations of electrons and nuclei. An initial optical excitation dissipates energy into electronic and structural degrees of freedom, often in less than one trillionth (10^-12)...

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Hauptverfasser: Lemke, Henrik T, Kjær, Kasper Skov, Hartsock, Robert, van Driel, Tim Brandt, Chollet, Matthieu, Glownia, J. M, Song, Sanghoon, Zhu, Diling, Pace, Elisabetta, Nielsen, Martin M, Benfatto, Maurizio, Gaffney, Kelly J, Collet, Eric, Cammarata, Marco
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A deep understanding of molecular photo-transformations is challenging because of the complex interaction between the configurations of electrons and nuclei. An initial optical excitation dissipates energy into electronic and structural degrees of freedom, often in less than one trillionth (10^-12) of a second. Molecular dynamics induced by photoexcitation have been very successfully studied with femtosecond optical spectroscopies, but electronic and nuclear dynamics are often very difficult to disentangle. X-ray based spectroscopies can reduce the ambiguity between theoretical models and experimental data, but it is only with the recent development of bright ultrafast X-ray sources, that key information during transient molecular processes can be obtained on their intrinsic timescale. In this letter, Free Electron Laser (FEL) radiation is used to measure ultrafast changes in the X-ray Absorption Near Edge Structure (XANES) during the prototypical photoreaction of a spin crossover compound. We reveal its transformation from the ligand-located electronic photoexcitation to the structural trapping of the high spin state. The results require a description beyond a kinetic model and provide a direct observation of a dynamic breathing of the main structural change. The coherent structural oscillations (period of ~265 fs) in the photoproduct potential lose synchrony within ~330 fs, whereas incoherent motions reveal the energy redistribution and vibrational cooling within ~1.6 ps. We foresee that ultrafast X-ray spectroscopies will provide invaluable insight to understand the complex physics of fundamental light induced phenomena, which are of prime interest in a multitude of chemical, physical and biological processes.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.1511.01294