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Vibrational cooling after ultrafast photoisomerization of azobenzene measured by femtosecond infrared spectroscopy

371

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37

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1997

Year

Abstract

The vibrational cooling of azobenzene after photoisomerization is investigated by time resolved IR spectroscopy with femtosecond time resolution. Transient difference spectra were obtained in a frequency range where phenyl ring modes and the central N=N-stretching mode absorbs. The experimental data are discussed in terms of a simple theoretical model which was derived in order to account for the off-diagonal anharmonicity between the investigated high-frequency modes and the bath of the remaining low-frequency modes in a polyatomic molecule. It is shown that these off-diagonal anharmonic constants dominate the observed transient absorbance changes while the anharmonicity of the high-frequency modes themselves (diagonal anharmonicity) causes only minor effects. Based on the transient IR spectra, the energy flow in the azobenzene molecule can be described as follows: After an initial ultrafast intramolecular energy redistribution process, the decay of the related intramolecular temperature occurs via intermolecular energy transfer to the solvent on a time scale of ca. 20 ps.

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