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Ultrafast processes in molecules Introduction Mario Barbatti [email protected] 1 settling the bases: photochemistry, excited states, and conical intersections 2 Stating the problem: • What does happen to a molecule when it is electronically excited? • How does it relax and get rid of the energy excess? • How long does this process take? • What products are formed? • How does the relaxation affect or is affected by the environment? • Is it possible to interfere and to control the outputs? 3 Basic sciences Biology Atmospheric sciences Astrophysics Technology Interaction photon/matter Coeherence/decoherence Nature of transition states Nonadiabatic phenomena Light and UV detection Photosynthesis Genetic code degradation Cellular proton pump UV induced chemistry Greenhouse effect Interstellar molecular synthesis Control of chemical reactions Molecular photo-switches 4 Pump-probe experiments based on ultra-fast laser pulses have increased the resolution of the chemical measurements to the femtosecond (10-15 s) time scale. 5 Theory is necessary to map the ground and excited state surfaces and to model the mechanisms taking place upon the photoexcitation. Theory is indispensable to deconvolute the raw timeresolved experimental information and to reveal the nature of the transition species. In particular, excited-state dynamics simulations can shed light on time dependent properties such as lifetimes and reaction yields. 6 7 P ~ |j|m |i|2 t ~ ns 8 P ~ vN j| |i t ~ fs 9 1. How are the excited state surfaces? 2. For which geometries does the molecule have conical intersections? 3. Can the molecule reach them? 10 formamide pyridone Antol et al. JCP 127, 234303 (2007) Barbatti et al., Chem. Phys. 349, 278 (2008) 11 Conical intersection Twisted Structure Examples R1 X R4 C R3 R2 Twisted-pyramidalized R1 X C R2 Stretchedbipyramidalized R4 R3 R4 R1 X C R3 R2 H-migration/carbene Out-of-plane O H C R3 R2 R1 R1 C O R1 X Ethylene 6-membered rings (aminopyrimidine) 4MCF Stilbene Polar substituted ethylenes Formamide 5-membered rings (pyrrole, imidazole) Ethylidene Cyclohexene Formamide Rings with carbonyl groups (pyridone, cytosine, thymine) R2 Bond breaking Polar substituted ethylenes (CH2NH2+) PSB3, PSB4 HBT Heteroaromatic rings (pyrrole, adenine, thiophene, furan, imidazole) Y R2 X Proton transfer R1 H Watson-Crick base pairs R2 12 1 3 (a) 4 2 5 6 (b) Barbatti et al. PCCP 10, 482 (2008) 13 7 7 Energy (eV) 6 6 5 5 4 4 4 3 3 3 5 2 2 2 1 H3 1 2 3 4 5 1 6 S3 6 1 2 3 4 5 0 6 n* 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 B3,6 1 E3 0 1 2 3 4 5 0 6 7 7 6 6 * 5 1 2 3 4 5 4 3 3 2 4 5 6 * E8 6 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 1/2 dMW (amu Å) n* 5 4 3 1 0 0 2 6 5 1 1 7 5 5 H3 0 0 6 * 4 1 7 7 * 2 4 0 0 Energy (eV) n* 6 * 0 Energy (eV) 7 2 2 1 E 6 1 0 S1 0 0 1 2 3 4 1/2 dMW (amu Å) 5 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 1/2 dMW (amu Å) 14 At a certain excitation energy: 1. Which reaction path is the most important for the excited-state relaxation? 2. How long does this relaxation take? 15 about methods & programs 16 Subject Approach Methods Vertical excitation spectra Conventional adiabatic quantum chemistry MRCI, CC2, TDDFT Stationary points in excited states Conventional adiabatic quantum chemistry MRCI, CC2, TDDFT Conical intersections Nonadiabatic quantum chemistry MRCI, MCSCF Reaction paths Convent. adiabatic quantum chemistry (multireference) MRCI, CASPT2, MCSCF Lifetime and yields Mixed quantum-classical dynamics methods MRCI, MCSCF (+ MM) 17 Energy Wave packet propagation Surface hopping propagation Reaction coordinate 18 Chair Twisted-chair Envelope Q q Screw-boat f Boat Cremer and Pople, JACS 97, 1358 (1975) Ex.: 1S6 = Screw-boat with atoms 1 above the plane and 6 below 19 dynamics: adenine 20 21 22 1 0.6 Extraterrestrial -2 Gua 0.4 0.4 Thy Surface Ura 0.2 0.2 Cyt 2 Ade 0.6 Cross section (Å ) -1 Solar irradiance (W.m nm ) 0.8 0.0 4 5 6 Photon energy (eV) • PCCP 12, 4959 (2010) 23 Base t1 (ps) t2 (ps) Ade 1.00 Gua 0.36 Thy 0.49 6.4 Ura 0.53 2.4 Cyt 0.82 3.2 Short lifetimes together with the low fluorescence quantum yields indicate internal conversion through conical intersections Purines: single step Pyrimidines: multiple steps • Ullrich, Schultz, Zgierski, Stolow, PCCP 6, 2796 (2004) 24 A short lifetime can enhance the photostability because the molecule does not stay too long in reactive excited states This effect might have constituted an evolutionary advantage for the five nucleobases forming DNA and RNA Indeed, there are experimental evidences that purine precursors in the prebiotic world were photostable 25 9H-Adenine 2-aminopurine 1 ps 30 ps 26 N9 H NH*/cs 9 */cs 6 N1 Many conical intersections available. Which of them are used for internal conversion? Why? On which time scale? C2 2 */cs H 27 E (eV) n* A2 A1 * 5 G1 G2 5 * G2a n* A2a cs Ade 3 -4 0 cs -6 C1a C1 5 C1c C1d P1 P2 6 P1c 5 P1a P1b n* n* C2 C1b cs P2a P1d N1 cs Cyt 3 -3 0 * * 0 3 H Gua 3 4 N9 G1a A1a Thy / Ura 3 -6 0 6 DR (Å.amu1/2) C2 H 28 E (eV) n* A2 A1 * 5 5 * n* A2a A1a cs cs Ade 3 -4 0 Gua 3 4 -6 0 6 * * 5 5 n* n* cs cs Cyt 3 -3 0 3 Thy / Ura 3 -6 0 6 DR (Å.amu1/2) • JACS 130, 6831 (2008) 29 E (eV) n* A2 A1 * 5 G1 G2 5 * G2a n* A2a G1a A1a cs cs Ade 3 -4 0 Gua 3 4 -6 0 6 * * 5 5 n* n* cs cs Cyt 3 -3 0 3 Thy / Ura 3 -6 0 6 DR (Å.amu1/2) • J Chem Phys 134, 014304 (2011) 30 E (eV) n* A2 A1 * 5 G1 G2 5 * G2a n* A2a G1a A1a cs cs Ade 3 -4 0 Gua 3 4 -6 0 * * 5 P1 P2 6 P1c 5 P1a P1b n* n* cs cs Cyt 3 -3 P2a 0 3 • J Phys Chem A 113, 12686 (2009) • J Phys Chem A 115, 5247 (2011) Thy / Ura 3 -6 0 6 DR (Å.amu1/2) 31 E (eV) n* A2 A1 * 5 G1 G2 5 * G2a n* A2a cs cs Ade 3 -4 0 Gua 3 4 -6 5 C1 C1c P1 P2 6 P1c 5 C1d P1a P1b n* n* C2 C1b cs P2a P1d cs Cyt 3 -3 0 * * C1a G1a A1a 0 3 Thy / Ura 3 -6 0 6 DR (Å.amu1/2) • PCCP 13, 6145 (2011) 32 E (eV) n* A2 A1 * 5 G1 G2 5 * G2a n* A2a cs cs Ade 3 -4 0 Gua 3 4 -6 5 C1 C1c P1 P2 6 P1c 5 C1d P1a P1b n* n* C2 C1b cs P2a P1d cs Cyt 3 -3 0 * * C1a Single step G1a A1a 0 3 Thy / Ura 3 -6 0 Multiple steps 6 DR (Å.amu1/2) • PNAS 107, 21453 (2010) 33 PHOTOINDUCED PHENOMENA IN NUCLEIC ACIDS Mario Barbatti, Antonio C. Borin, Susanne Ullrich (Eds.) Coming soon 1. Photoinduced processes in nucleic acids Mario Barbatti, Antonio Borin, Susanne Ullrich 2. UV-excitation I: frequency resolved Mattanjah S. de Vries 3. UV-excitation II: time resolved Thomas Schultz 4. Excitation of nucleobases I: reaction paths Manuela Merchán 5. Excitation of nucleobases II: dynamics Letícia Gonzalez 6. Excitation of paired and stacked nucleobases Dana Nachtigallova, Hans Lischka 7. Modified nucleobases Spiridoula Matsika 8. UV-excitation of solvated nucleobases I Carlos E. Crespo-Hernandez 9. UV-excitation of solvated nucleobases II Roberto Improta 10. Excitation of single and double strands I Bern Kohler 11. Excitation of single and double strands II Zhenggang Lan, Walter Thiel 12. Synchrotron irradiation of DNA fragments Martin Schwell 13. Physiological aspects of excitation of DNA Donat-P. Häder 14. Photoynthesis in prebiotic environments Scott Sandford 15. Photoinduced charge-transfer in DNA and applications in nano-electronics Kiyohiko Kawai, Tetsuro Majima 16. Electronic energy transfer in nucleic acids Dimitra Markovitsi 34 9H-adenine q (°) 180 170 fs 90 200 fs 0 fs 2-pyridone 120 fs 180 0 0 90 180 270 360 q (°) f (°) 90 • Chem. Phys. 349, 278 (2008) 0 0 90 180 270 360 f (°) 35 Adenine is trapped close to 2E conformation and because of this it has time enough to tune the coordinates of the conical intersection. Adenine is a non-fluorescent species. Pyridone does not stay close to any specific conformation long enough in order to have time to tune the coordinates of the conical intersections. Pyridone is a fluorescent species. 36 conclusions 37 38 39 • MQCD simulations are not a substitute for the conventional quantum-chemistry calculations, but a complementary tool to be used carefully given their high computational costs • They can be specially useful to test specific hypothesis raised either by experimental analysis or conventional calculations 40 Zewail, J. Phys. Chem. A 104, 5660 (2000) 41 Next lecture • Transient spectrum • Excited state surfaces Contact [email protected] 42