4.8 Article

Torsionally broken symmetry assists infrared excitation of biomimetic charge-coupled nuclear motions in the electronic ground state

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue 32, Pages 9392-9400

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2sc02133a

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Funding

  1. Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
  2. National Science Foundation [CHE-1710191]
  3. MIUR Department of Excellence Grant

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This study reveals the importance of the concerted interplay between nuclear and electronic motions in molecules in solution for chemical reactions. By experiment and simulation, we find that vibrational excitation plays a key role in modulating the charge-density distribution, and demonstrate the significance of molecular geometries in energy transfer.
The concerted interplay between reactive nuclear and electronic motions in molecules actuates chemistry. Here, we demonstrate that out-of-plane torsional deformation and vibrational excitation of stretching motions in the electronic ground state modulate the charge-density distribution in a donor-bridge-acceptor molecule in solution. The vibrationally-induced change, visualised by transient absorption spectroscopy with a mid-infrared pump and a visible probe, is mechanistically resolved by ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. Mapping the potential energy landscape attributes the observed charge-coupled coherent nuclear motions to the population of the initial segment of a double-bond isomerization channel, also seen in biological molecules. Our results illustrate the pivotal role of pre-twisted molecular geometries in enhancing the transfer of vibrational energy to specific molecular modes, prior to thermal redistribution. This motivates the search for synthetic strategies towards achieving potentially new infrared-mediated chemistry.

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