4.5 Article

Ultrafast Excited State Dynamics of 5,6-Dihydroxyindole, A Key Eumelanin Building Block: Nonradiative Decay Mechanism

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 113, Issue 37, Pages 12575-12580

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp903190k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Energy Agency (STEM)
  2. Wennergrenska Stiftelsen, the Crafoord Foundation
  3. Swedish Research Council (VR) [RII3-CT-2003-506350]
  4. Italian Ministry of University
  5. European Community

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As part of a program designed to elucidate the excited state properties of key eumelanin building blocks, we report herein a study of 5,6-dihydroxyindole (DHI) in phosphate buffer at pH 3 and pH 7 using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. The transient absorption changes following excitation at 266 full were used to directly monitor relaxation of the excited states. It was found that the initially generated excited state of DHI, exhibiting two main absorption bands at similar to 450 and similar to 550 nm, decays with a time constant of 5-10 ps to the equilibrated singlet excited state characterized by a very similar spectrum. This latter state then decays to the ground state and the triplet state with a characteristic time of similar to 140-180 ps. Concomitant with the singlet excited state decay of DHI, spectral features characteristic of the DHI cation radical (band at similar to 575 nm) and the triplet state (band at 440-450 nm) are detected. These species do not decay further since geminate recombination of the solvated electron and the DHI radical cation, as well as deprotonation of the cation to form the neutral semiquinone radical, Occur oil a time scale longer than that covered by the present experiments. These results offer novel insights into the mechanisms of nonradiative decay eumelanin building blocks of possible relevance to the putative photoprotective and phototoxic roles of these biopolymers.

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