Lifetimes of the first electronic excited state (S(1)) of fluorine and methyl (o-, m-, and p-) substituted phenols and their complexes with one ammonia molecule have been measured for the 0(0) transition and for the intermolecular stretching σ(1) levels in complexes using picosecond pump-probe spectroscopy. Excitation energies to the S(1) (ππ*) and S(2) (πσ*) states are obtained by quantum chemical calculations at the MP2 and CC2 level using the aug-cc-pVDZ basis set for the ground-state and the S(1) optimized geometries. The observed lifetimes and the energy gaps between the ππ* and πσ* states show a good correlation, the lifetime being shorter for a smaller energy gap. This propensity suggests that the major dynamics in the excited state concerns an excited state hydrogen detachment or transfer (ESHD/T) promoted directly by a S(1)/S(2) conical intersection, rather than via internal conversion to the ground-state. A specific shortening of lifetime is found in the o-fluorophenol-ammonia complex and explained in terms of the vibronic coupling between the ππ* and πσ* states occurring through the out-of-plane distortion of the C-F bond.
The photodissociation dynamics of pyrrole-ammonia clusters (PyHÁ(NH 3 ) n , n = 2-6) has been studied using a combination of velocity map imaging and non-resonant detection of the NH 4 (NH 3 ) nÀ1 products. The excited state hydrogen-atom transfer mechanism (ESHT) is evidenced through delayed ionization and presents a threshold around 236.6 nm, in agreement with previous reports. A high resolution determination of the kinetic energy distributions (KEDs) of the products reveals slow (B0.15 eV) and structured distributions for all the ammonia cluster masses studied. The low values of the measured kinetic energy rule out the existence of a long-lived intermediate state, as it has been proposed previously. Instead, a direct N-H bond rupture, in the fashion of the photodissociation of bare pyrrole, is proposed. This assumption is supported by a careful analysis of the structure of the measured KEDs in terms of a discrete vibrational activity of the pyrrolyl co-fragment.
The structure and reactivity of p-CrOH(NH(3))(2) and p-CrOH(H(2)O)(NH(3)) complexes were studied using mass-resolved one-colour resonance-enhanced multi-photon ionization and laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) spectroscopy together with DFT calculations. At the excitation energy of this work, the S(1) state of p-CrOH(NH(3))(2) shows a sub-nanosecond lifetime, as determined by time-resolved LIF spectra, as a consequence of a hydrogen transfer process that results in NH(4)(NH(3)) as a reaction product. Substitution of NH(3) by H(2)O closes the reaction channel as evidenced by the absence of excited-state hydrogen transfer (ESHT) reaction products, (H(3)O(NH(3)) or NH(4)(H(2)O)) and results in a dramatic effect on the S(1) lifetime of the p-CrOH(H(2)O)(NH(3)) complex which rises to (12 +/- 2) ns. According to density functional theory calculations, the most stable isomer of the p-CrOH(H(2)O)(NH(3)) complex is a cyclic structure, in which H(2)O acts as the H acceptor of the phenolic OH group (c-OH-H(2)O-NH(3)). However, the ESHT process is energetically disallowed upon electronic excitation.
The H-bonded network rearrangements in the S(0), S(1) and D(0) states of the neutral and cationic p-CreOH(H(2)O)(NH(3)) complexes were studied experimentally by means of (1 + 1)/(1 + 1') REMPI (Resonantly Enhanced MultiPhoton Ionization) and time resolved LIF (Laser Induced Fluorescence) spectroscopies combined with DFT (Density Functional Theory) calculations at the B3LYP/6-311G++(d,p) level. A comparison of the rearrangement process of the H-bonded network in the three states is given. Two cyclic H-bonded isomers were found on the S(0) potential energy surface and the results indicate that the rearrangement in this state is unlikely at the temperature of the supersonic expansion due to the presence of a high-energy barrier (7503 cm(-1)). On the other hand, the re-determination of the S(1) excited state lifetimes confirms that neither the H-bonded rearrangement nor the excited state hydrogen transfer (ESHT) reaction takes place in the S(1) state at the excitation energies of this work. Thus, it is concluded that the absorption of the second photon to reach the D(0) state takes place from the S(1) state of the cyclic-(OH-OH(2)-NH(3)) isomer. A preferential evaporation of H(2)O upon vertical ionization of the cyclic-(OH-OH(2)-NH(3)) isomer is observed which is consistent with a statistical redistribution of the internal energy. Nevertheless, our theoretical calculations suggest that initial excitation of the H-bonded network rearrangement modes may also play a role to leave the H(2)O molecule as a terminal moiety in a chain-(OH-NH(3)-OH(2))(+) isomer. The reaction pathway for the solvent rearrangement involves a double proton transfer process with a very low energy barrier (575 cm(-1)) that is overcome at the vertical ionization energy of the complex.
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