Publication | Open Access
Relaxation Dynamics of Hydrated Thymine, Thymidine, and Thymidine Monophosphate Probed by Liquid Jet Time-Resolved Photoelectron Spectroscopy
27
Citations
48
References
2019
Year
Relaxation ProcessEngineeringExcitation Energy TransferChemistryElectronic Excited StateHydrated ThyminePhotophysical PropertyBiophysicsMolecular SpectroscopyThymidine MonophosphateThymidine Monophosphate ProbedPhotochemistryPhysicsRelaxation DynamicsMechanistic PhotochemistryPhotonic MaterialsPhysical ChemistryQuantum ChemistryExcited State PropertyNatural SciencesSpectroscopyApplied PhysicsChemical KineticsEv Probe PulseDerivatives Thymidine
The relaxation dynamics of thymine and its derivatives thymidine and thymidine monophosphate are studied using time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy applied to a water microjet. Two absorption bands are studied; the first is a bright ππ* state which is populated using tunable-ultraviolet light in the range 4.74-5.17 eV and probed using a 6.20 eV probe pulse. By reversing the order of these pulses, a band containing multiple ππ* states is populated by the 6.20 eV pulse and the lower energy pulse serves as the probe. The lower lying ππ* state is found to decay in ∼400 fs in both thymine and thymidine independent of pump photon energy, while thymidine monophosphate decays vary from 670 to 840 fs with some pump energy dependence. The application of a computational quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical scheme at the XMS-CASPT2//CASSCF/AMBER level of theory suggests that conformational differences existing between thymidine and thymidine monophosphate in solution account for this difference. The higher lying ππ* band is found to decay in ∼600 fs in all three cases, but it is only able to be characterized when the 5.17 eV probe pulse is used. Notably, no long-lived signal from an nπ* state can be identified in either experiment on any of the three molecules.
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