High-Repetition Rate Optical Pump-Nuclear Resonance Probe Experiments Identify Transient Molecular Vibrations after Photoexcitation of a Spin Crossover Material.
Sadashivaiah SakshathJuliusz A WolnyLena ScherthanKevin JenniAndreas OmlorChristina S MüllerIlya SergueevMarcus HerlitschkeOlaf LeupoldHans-Christian WilleRalf RöhlsbergerVolker SchünemannPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2021)
Phonon modes play a vital role in the cooperative phenomenon of light-induced spin transitions in spin crossover (SCO) molecular complexes. Although the cooperative vibrations, which occur over several hundreds of picoseconds to nanoseconds after photoexcitation, are understood to play a crucial role in this phase transition, they have not been precisely identified. Therefore, we have performed a novel optical laser pump-nuclear resonance probe experiment to identify the Fe-projected vibrational density of states (pDOS) during the first few nanoseconds after laser excitation of the mononuclear Fe(II) SCO complex [Fe(PM-BiA)2(NCS)2]. Evaluation of the so obtained nanosecond-resolved pDOS yields an excitation of ∼8% of the total volume of the complex from the low-spin to high-spin state. Density functional theory calculations allow simulation of the observed changes in the pDOS and thus identification of the transient inter- and intramolecular vibrational modes at nanosecond time scales.
Keyphrases
- density functional theory
- energy transfer
- molecular dynamics
- quantum dots
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- single molecule
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- cerebral ischemia
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- randomized controlled trial
- double blind
- heavy metals
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- risk assessment
- blood brain barrier
- molecular dynamics simulations
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