Journal of Chemical Physics, Vol.120, No.10, 4768-4776, 2004
Femtosecond absorption study of photodissociation of diphenylcyclopropenone in solution: Reaction dynamics and coherent nuclear motion
Reaction dynamics and coherent nuclear motions in the photodissociation of diphenylcyclopropenone (DPCP) were studied in solution by time-resolved absorption spectroscopy. Subpicosecond transient absorption spectra were measured in the visible region with excitation at the second absorption band of DPCP. The obtained spectra showed a new short-lived band around 480 nm immediately after photoexcitation, which is assignable to the initially populated S-2 state of DPCP before the dissociation. The dissociation takes place from this excited state (the precursor of the reaction) with a time constant of 0.2 ps, and the excited state of diphenylacetylene (DPA) is generated as the reaction product. The transient absorption after the dissociation decayed with a time constant of 8 ps that is very close to the S-2-state lifetime of DPA, but the spectrum of this 8-ps component was different from the S-2 absorption observed with direct photoexcitation of DPA. We conclude that the dissociation of DPCP generates the S-2 state of DPA that probably has a cis-bent structure. At later delay times (>30 ps), the transient absorption signals are very similar to those obtained by direct photoexcitation of DPA. This confirmed that the electronic relaxation from the S-2 state of the product DPA occurs in a similar manner to that of DPA itself, i.e., the internal conversion to the S-1 state and subsequent intersystem crossing to the T-1 state. In order to examine the coherent nuclear dynamics in this dissociation reaction, we carried out time-resolved absorption measurements for the 480-nm band with 70 fs resolution. It was found that an underdamped oscillatory modulation with a 0.1-ps period is superposed on the decay of the precursor absorption. This indicates that DPCP exhibits a coherent nuclear motion having a similar to330-cm(-1) frequency in the dissociative excited state. Based on a comparison with the measured and calculated Raman spectra of ground-state DPCP, we discuss the assignment of the "330-cm(-1) vibration" and attribute it to a vibration involving the displacement of the CO group as well as the deformation of the Ph-C=C-Ph skeleton. We consider that this motion is closely related to the reaction coordinate of the photodissociation of DPCP. (C) 2004 American Institute of Physics.