4.7 Article

Three-dimensional-IR spectroscopy: Beyond the two-point frequency fluctuation correlation function

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 124, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/1.2178811

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Three-dimensional-IR spectroscopy is proposed as a new spectroscopic technique that is sensitive to three-point frequency fluctuation correlation functions. This will be important when the statistics of the underlying stochastic process is non-Gaussian, and hence when the system does not follow the linear response hypothesis. Furthermore, a very general classification of nonlinear spectroscopy in terms of higher order frequency fluctuation correlation functions is introduced, according to which certain moments of a multidimensional spectrum are related to certain frequency fluctuation correlation functions. The classification is rigorous in the so-called inhomogenous limit, but remains valid approximately also when motional narrowing becomes important. The work also puts a recent paper [J. Bredenbeck , Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 083201 (2005)] onto solid theoretical grounds, where we have shown for the first time that fifth-order spectroscopy-in this case transient two-dimensional spectroscopy-is indeed sensitive to the three-point frequency fluctuation correlation function.

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