4.5 Article

Pump-deplete-probe spectroscopy and the puzzle of carotenoid dark states

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 108, Issue 10, Pages 3320-3325

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp036145k

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Pump-deplete-probe and transient absorption spectroscopy are applied to carotenoids with N = 11 conjugated double bonds in solution to study the origin of recently observed transient features that have been previously assigned to new electronic states. The depletion pulse pumps the transient near-IR band, whose lifetime coincides with the fluorescence lifetime, and is hence attributed to the S-2 state. The subsequent signal of any lower-lying dark excited-state populated by internal conversion from S-2 should be affected by the depletion pulse. Correspondingly, the signal in the S-1 deactivation channel is diminished by the depleted excited population. In contrast, the S-sol* signal, purportedly reflecting an intermediate state on a competing deactivation pathway, is not affected by the depletion pulse. When comparing our results with literature data for other carotenoids, we find that the S-sol* lifetime is constant at 6.2 +/- 0.4 ps for any N greater than or equal to 11 carotenoid; for shorter chain lengths, it is equal to the S-1 lifetime. To explain this puzzle, S-sol* is identified as a vibrationally excited ground state (S-sol* = hot S-0), populated by a combination of impulsive Raman scattering of the pump pulse and internal conversion (S-1-S-0), and decaying by vibrational relaxation. The S-sol* state is not identical to the S-T* state, which appears in the same spectral region when the carotenoid is embedded in light-harvesting complexes.

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