APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session J38: Focus Session: Ultrafast Dynamics and Imaging II
11:15 AM–1:39 PM,
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Room: A130/131
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCP
Chair: Markus Guehr, Stanford University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.J38.3
Abstract: J38.00003 : ``Molecular spectrometers'' in the condensed phase: local THz-FIR response from femtosecond fluorescence
12:03 PM–12:39 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Nikolaus Ernsting
(Humboldt University Berlin)
We examine dye molecules whose color depends on the polarity of
the environment. Following fast optical excitation, their
fluorescence band typically red-shifts by 0.5 eV on femtosecond
to nanosecond time scales. This ``dynamic Stokes shift'' reflects
the joint molecular and environmental reorganisation of the
system. Solvation dynamics has been studied for decades in the
hope that the dynamics of the environment itself can be
extracted. We contribute with two research lines: (1) development
of rigid polar solvation probes whose vibrational response is
removed from that of water, for example, and (2) fluorescence
techniques which measure the dynamic Stokes shifts more
precisely. Two results will be shown.
The frequency-dependent permittivity $\varepsilon (\omega )$ of
water surrounding N-Methyl-6-Quinolone is extracted up to about
100 cm$^{-1}$ from the time-resolved fluorescence shift R(t). The
key consists in an analytical connection $\varepsilon (\omega )
\quad \to $ R(t) which is needed for data fitting. Measurements
with the cryoprotectant disaccharide trehalose in
water serve to establish the method. Its unique feature is
locality, $i.e.$ the possibility to measure $\varepsilon
(\omega)$ around a supramolecular structure with a covalently
connected or embedded probe.
THz vibrational activity of a biopolymer is thus measured
locally, on the effective length scale for polar solvation, with
an embedded molecular probe. For this purpose
2-hydroxy-7-nitro-fluorene was linked into a 13mer duplex
opposite an abasic site. The NMR solution structure shows that
the fluorene moiety occupies a well-defined position in place of
a base-pair.
The dynamic Stokes shifts for solution in H$_{2}$O and D$_{2}$O
are quantified. Their difference is much larger than expected for
free water, suggesting that only bound water is observed. A weak
26 cm$^{-1}$ spectral oscillation of the emission band is
observed which is not present when the probe is free in solution,
and is therefore caused by the supramolecular
structure (DNA and hydration water).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.J38.3