Publication | Closed Access
Characterization of spectral diffusion from two-dimensional line shapes
308
Citations
27
References
2006
Year
Transient GratingEngineeringLine ShapeOptical PropertiesTransport PhenomenaAnomalous DiffusionOptical SpectroscopyBiophysicsPhysicsQuantum ChemistryExcited State PropertyFrequency FluctuationsTransition FrequencySpectroscopyNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsDiffusion ProcessSpectral DiffusionSpectral AnalysisMultiscale Modeling
The analysis of line shapes in two-dimensional optical and infrared spectroscopies is a powerful approach to characterizing the dynamics of molecules in the condensed phase. Changes in line shape from diagonally elongated to symmetric as a function of waiting time arise from evolution of the transition frequency. We describe a number of quantitative measures of frequency fluctuations and spectral diffusion through the analysis of two-dimensional (2D) line shapes. These metrics are identical to the system's frequency correlation function and independent of population relaxation in the limit of a short time approximation for the 2D response. We also test the broader applicability of these expressions for analyzing three-level vibrational systems and experiments with finite pulses.
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