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Tracking structural solvent reorganization and recombination dynamics following e - photoabstraction from aqueous I - with femtosecond x-ray spectroscopy and scattering.

Peter VesterKatharina KubicekRoberto Alonso-MoriTadesse AssefaElisa BiasinMorten ChristensenAsmus Ougaard DohnTim Brandt van DrielAndreas GallerWojciech GaweldaTobias C B HarlangNiels E HenriksenKasper S KjærThomas S KuhlmanZoltán NémethZhangatay NurekeyevMátyás PápaiJochen RittmanGyörgy VankóHasan YavasDiana Bregenholt ZederkofUwe BergmannMartin Meedom NielsenKlaus Braagaard Mo LlerKristoffer HaldrupChristian Bressler
Published in: The Journal of chemical physics (2022)
We present a sub-picosecond resolved investigation of the structural solvent reorganization and geminate recombination dynamics following 400 nm two-photon excitation and photodetachment of a valence p electron from the aqueous atomic solute, I - (aq). The measurements utilized time-resolved X-ray Absorption Near Edge Structure (TR-XANES) spectroscopy and X-ray Solution Scattering (TR-XSS) at the Linac Coherent Light Source x-ray free electron laser in a laser pump/x-ray probe experiment. The XANES measurements around the L 1 -edge of the generated nascent iodine atoms (I 0 ) yield an average electron ejection distance from the iodine parent of 7.4 ± 1.5 Å with an excitation yield of about 1/3 of the 0.1M NaI aqueous solution. The kinetic traces of the XANES measurement are in agreement with a purely diffusion-driven geminate iodine-electron recombination model without the need for a long-lived (I 0 :e - ) contact pair. Nonequilibrium classical molecular dynamics simulations indicate a delayed response of the caging H 2 O solvent shell and this is supported by the structural analysis of the XSS data: We identify a two-step process exhibiting a 0.1 ps delayed solvent shell reorganization time within the tight H-bond network and a 0.3 ps time constant for the mean iodine-oxygen distance changes. The results indicate that most of the reorganization can be explained classically by a transition from a hydrophilic cavity with a well-ordered first solvation shell (hydrogens pointing toward I - ) to an expanded cavity around I 0 with a more random orientation of the H 2 O molecules in a broadened first solvation shell.
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