Mizuno M, Yamaguchi S, Tahara T. Relaxation Dynamics of the Hydrated Electron: Femtosecond Time-Resolved Resonance Raman and Luminescence Study.
J Phys Chem A 2005;
109:5257-65. [PMID:
16839048 DOI:
10.1021/jp050828d]
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Abstract
Femtosecond time-resolved resonance Raman measurements were carried out to examine the relaxation process of the hydrated electron in water. The rise of the intra- and intermolecular vibrational Raman bands of the solvating water molecules was successfully time-resolved with a time resolution as high as 250 fs. The temporal intensity change of Raman bands, as well as that of luminescence background, was compared with the time evolution of the transient absorption signal. It was found that (1) the Raman and luminescence signals exhibited the same temporal behavior, (2) the rise time of the Raman bands is faster than the appearance of the equilibrated hydrated electron, indicating that the precursor state also gives rise to resonance Raman signals, and (3) the rise of the transient Raman band is slower than that of the transient absorption at the probe wavelength of 800 nm. Because it has been shown that the Raman intensity enhancement arises from the resonance with the s --> p transition, fact 2 implies that the precursor state is the nonequilibrated s-state electron. The delayed rise of the Raman signal compared to the absorption was explained in terms of the temporal change of the resonance condition. In very early time when the absorption is largely red-shifted, the probe at 800 nm is resonant with the high energy part of the absorption that provides little resonance Raman enhancement. This explanation was consistent with the probe wavelength dependence of the temporal behavior of the Raman signal: the Raman bands measured with the higher energy probe (600 nm) rose even more slowly. The resonance Raman signal in the anti-Stokes side was also examined, but no anti-Stokes band was observable. It suggests that the temperature increase of the solvation structure around the nonequilibrated hydrated electron is less than 100 K.
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