4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

Vibrational echo correlation spectroscopy probes of hydrogen bond dynamics in water and methanol

Journal

JOURNAL OF LUMINESCENCE
Volume 107, Issue 1-4, Pages 271-286

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jlumin.2003.12.035

Keywords

infrared; ultrafast; vibrational echo; correlation spectroscopy; multidimensional; methanol; hydrogen bond network; hydrogen bond dynamics; hydrogen bond breaking; water

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM061137-08, R01 GM061137] Funding Source: Medline

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Multidimensional vibrational echo correlation spectroscopy with full phase resolution is used to measure hydrogen bond dynamics in water and methanol. The OD hydroxyl stretches of methanol-OD oligomers in CCl4 and HOD in H2O are studied using the shortest mid-IR pulses (<50 fs, <4 cycles of light) produced to date. The pulses have sufficient spectral bandwidth to span the very broad (>400 cm(-1)) spectrum of the 0-1 and 1-2 transitions. Hydrogen bond population dynamics are extricated with exceptional detail in MeOD oligomers because the different hydrogen bonded species are spectrally distinct. The experimental results along with detailed calculations indicate the strongest hydrogen bonds are selectively broken through a non-equilibrium relaxation pathway following vibrational relaxation of the hydroxyl stretch. The correlation spectra are also a sensitive probe of the fluctuations in water and provide a stringent test of water models that are widely used in simulations of aqueous systems. The analysis of the 2D band shapes demonstrates that different hydrogen bonded species are subject to distinct (wavelength dependent) ultrafast (similar to100 fs) local fluctuations and essentially identical slow (0.4 and similar to2 ps) structural rearrangements. Observation of wavelength dependent dynamics demonstrates that standard theoretical approaches assuming Gaussian fluctuations cannot adequately describe water dynamics. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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