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Comprehensive Study of Ultrafast Excited-State Proton Transfer in Water and D<sub>2</sub>O Providing the Missing RO<sup>–</sup>···H<sup>+</sup> Ion-Pair Fingerprint
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Citations
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References
2014
Year
Proton-coupled Electron TransferMagnetic ResonanceExcitation Energy TransferChemistryElectronic Excited StateComprehensive StudyH2o IcePhotophysical PropertyBiophysicsPhysicsPhotochemistryPhotosystemsMechanistic PhotochemistryPhysical ChemistryHydrogenQuantum ChemistrySupramolecular PhotochemistryExcited State PropertyNatural SciencesSpectroscopyProton TransferMedicineMissing Intermediate ProductGeneral Photoacid
Steady-state and time-resolved optical techniques were employed to study the photoprotolytic mechanism of a general photoacid. Previously, a general scheme was suggested that includes an intermediate product that, up until now, had not been clearly observed experimentally. For our study, we used quinone cyanine 7 (QCy7) and QCy9, the strongest photoacids synthesized so far, to look for the missing intermediate product of an excited-state proton transfer to the solvent. Low-temperature steady-state emission spectra of both QCy7 and QCy9 clearly show an emission band at T < 165 K in H2O ice that could be assigned to ion-pair RO(-)*···H3O(+), the missing intermediate. Room-temperature femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy transient spectra at short times (t < 4 ps) also shows the existence of transient absorption and emission bands that we assigned to the RO(-)*···H3O(+) ion pair. The intermediate dissociates on a time scale of 1 ps and about 1.5 ps in H2O and D2O samples, respectively.
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