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Bioluminescence in fireflies and related insects arises as emission from the fluorophore oxyluciferin, yet the color of the emission in these insects can range from red to green. The chromophore's microenvironment or multiple tautomeric forms may be responsible for the color tuning; however, these effects are difficult to separate in condensed phases. To investigate the role of oxyluciferin tautomerization in the color tuning mechanism, gas-phase spectroscopy eliminates solvent effects and allows us to study the fluorescence from individual tautomers. Using a home-built mass-spectrometry setup with a cylindrical ion trap cooled with liquid nitrogen, we measure fluorescence from the enol-locked form of oxyluciferin in the gas phase and characterize the photophysics of both keto and enol forms. At 100 K, the enol-locked form has an emission maximum of 564 ± 1 nm, coinciding with a previously reported assignment in oxyluciferin. We measure the absorption spectrum and find a maximum at 560.5 ± 0.5 nm, which implies a Stokes shift of 110 cm-1. The absorption spectrum is compared to Franck-Condon simulated spectra that identify one dominant vibrational mode in the transition. Additionally, we ultimately separated the emission by the enol and keto forms present in the trap by selectively exciting each form. We demonstrate that fluorescence measured close to the 0-0 transition limits the reheating of the ions, thereby providing the coldest ions and therefore the narrowest emission spectra. These experimental data are also crucial benchmarks for computational studies, offering actual emission spectra in the gas phase for both tautomeric forms. Thus, our findings serve as essential reference points for excited-state calculations aimed at understanding the color tuning mechanism of bioluminescence computationally.
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Proflavine, a fluorescent cationic dye with strong absorption in the visible, has been proposed as a potential contributor to diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs). To investigate this hypothesis, it is essential to examine the spectra of cold and isolated ions for comparison. Here, we report absorption spectra of proflavine ions, trapped in a liquid-nitrogen-cooled ion trap filled with helium-buffer gas, as well as fluorescence spectra to provide further information on the intrinsic photophysics. We find absorption- and fluorescence-band maxima at 434.2 ± 0.1 and 434.7 ± 0.3 nm, corresponding to a Stokes shift of maximum 48 cm-1, which indicates minor differences between ground-state and excited-state geometries. Based on time-dependent density functional theory, we assign the emitting state to S2 as its geometry closely resembles that of S0, whereas the S1 geometry differs from that of S0. As a result, simulated spectra involving S1 exhibit long Franck-Condon progressions, absent in the experimental spectra. The latter displays well-resolved vibrational features, assigned to transitions involving in-plane vibrational modes where the vibrational quantum number changes by one. Dominant transitions are associated with vibrations localized on the NH2 moieties. Experiments repeated at room temperature yield broader spectra with maxima at 435.5 ± 1 nm (absorption) and 438.0 ± 1 nm (fluorescence). We again conclude that prevalent fluorescence arises from S2, i.e., anti-Kasha behavior, in agreement with previous work. Excited-state lifetimes are 5 ± 1 ns, independent of temperature. Importantly, we exclude the possibility that a narrow DIB at 436.4 nm originates from cold proflavine cations as the band is redshifted compared to our absorption spectra.
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The ion motion in a quadrupole ion trap of hyperbolic geometry is well described by the Mathieu equations. A simpler cylindrical ion trap has also gained significance and has been used by us for fluorescence-spectroscopy experiments. This design allows for the easy replacement of the end-cap with a mesh, enhancing the photon collection. It is crucial to obtain a firm understanding of the ion motion in cylindrical ion traps and their capability as mass spectrometers. We present here an empirical method of calibrating a cylindrical ion trap based on fluorescence detection. This can be done nearly background-free in a pulsed experiment. The ions are located at the center of the trap, where the field is primarily quadrupolar, and here an effective Mathieu description is found through an effective geometry parameter. In spectroscopy experiments, high buffer-gas pressures are needed to efficiently cool the ions, which complicates the ions' motion and hence their stability. Still, simulations show that the stability diagram closely aligns with the Mathieu diagram, albeit shifted due to collisions. We map the stability diagram for six molecular ions by fluorescence collection from four cations and two anions spanning m/z from 212 to 647. The stability diagram is parametrized through the Mathieu functions with an m/z-dependent effective geometry parameter and a q-dependent shrinkage of the diagram. Based on the calibration, we estimate the mass resolution to be +7/-3 Da for ions with masses in the hundreds of Da.
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Recent developments in fluorescence spectroscopy have made it possible to measure both absorption and dispersed fluorescence spectra of isolated molecular ions at liquid-nitrogen temperatures. Absorption is here obtained from fluorescence-excitation experiments and does not rely on ion dissociation. One large advantage of reduced temperature compared to room-temperature spectroscopy is that spectra are narrow, and they provide information on vibronic features that can better be assigned from theoretical simulations. We report on the intrinsic spectroscopic properties of oxazine dyes cooled to about 100 K. They include six cations (crystal violet, darrow red, oxazine-1, oxazine-4, oxazine-170 and nile blue) and one anion (resorufin). Experiments were done with a home-built setup (LUNA2) where ions are stored, mass-selected, cooled, and photoexcited in a cylindrical ion trap. We find that the Stokes shifts are small (14-50 cm-1), which is ascribed to rigid geometries, that is, there are only small geometrical changes between the electronic ground and excited states. However, both the absorption and the emission spectra of darrow-red cations are broader than those of the other ionic dyes, which is likely associated with a less symmetric electronic structure and more non-zero Franck-Condon factors for the vibrational progressions. In the case of resorufin, the smallest ion under study, vibrational features are assigned based on calculated spectra.
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Bioluminescence from fireflies, click beetles, and railroad worms ranges in color from green-yellow to orange to red. The keto form of oxyluciferin is considered a key emitter species in the proposed mechanisms to account for color variation. To establish the intrinsic photophysics in the absence of a microenvironment, we present experimental and theoretical gas-phase absorption and emission spectra of the 5,5-dimethyloxyluciferin anion (keto form) at room and cryogenic temperatures as well as lifetime measurements based on fluorescence. The theoretical model includes all 75 vibrational modes. The spectral impact of the large number of excited states at elevated temperatures is captured by an effective state distribution. At low temperature, spectral congestion is greatly reduced, and the observed well-resolved vibrational features are assigned to multiple Franck-Condon progressions involving different vibrational modes. An in-plane â¼60 cm-1 scissoring mode is found to be involved in the dominant progressions.
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Fluorescence spectroscopy of gas-phase ions generated through electrospray ionization is an emerging technique able to probe intrinsic molecular photophysics directly without perturbations from solvent interactions. While there is ample scope for the ongoing development of gas-phase fluorescence techniques, the recent expansion into low-temperature operating conditions accesses a wealth of data on intrinsic fluorophore photophysics, offering enhanced spectral resolution compared with room-temperature measurements, without matrix effects hindering the excited-state dynamics. This perspective reviews current progress on understanding the photophysics of anionic fluorone dyes, which exhibit an unusually large Stokes shift in the gas phase, and discusses how comparison of gas- and condensed-phase fluorescence spectra can fingerprint structural dynamics. The capacity for temperature-dependent measurements of both fluorescence emission and excitation spectra helps establish the foundation for the use of fluorone dyes as fluorescent tags in macromolecular structure determination. We suggest ideas for technique development.
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Förster Resonance Energy transfer (FRET) is a nonradiative process that may occur from an electronically excited donor to an acceptor when the emission spectrum of the donor overlaps with the absorption spectrum of the acceptor. FRET experiments have been done in the gas phase based on specially designed mass-spectroscopy setups with the goal to obtain structural information on biomolecular ions labeled with a FRET pair (i.e., donor and acceptor dyes) and to shed light on the energy-transfer process itself. Ions are accumulated in a radio-frequency ion trap or a Penning trap where mass selection of those of interest takes place, followed by photoexcitation. Gas-phase FRET is identified from detection of emitted light either from the donor, the acceptor, or both, or from a fragmentation channel that is specific to the acceptor when electronically excited. The challenge associated with the first approach is the collection and detection of photons emitted from a thin ion cloud that is not easily accessible while the second approach relies both on the photophysical and chemical behavior of the acceptor. In this review, we present the different instrumentation used for gas-phase FRET, including a discussion of advantages and disadvantages, and examples on how the technique has provided important structural information that is not easily obtainable otherwise. Furthermore, we describe how the spectroscopic properties of the dyes are affected by nearby electric fields, which is readily discernable from experiments on simple model systems with alkyl or π-conjugated bridges. Such spectral changes can have a significant effect on the FRET efficiency. Ideas for new directions are presented at the end with special focus on cold-ion spectroscopy.
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Fireflies, click beetles, and railroad worms glow in the dark. The color varies from green to red among the insects and is associated with an electronically excited oxyluciferin formed catalytically by the luciferase enzyme. The actual color tuning mechanism has been, and still is, up for much debate. One complication is that oxyluciferin can occur in different charge states and isomeric forms. We present here emission spectra of oxyluciferin monoanions in vacuo at both room temperature and at 100 K recorded with a newly developed and unique mass-spectroscopy setup specially designed for gas-phase ion fluorescence spectroscopy. Ions are limited to the phenolate-keto and phenolate-enol forms that account for natural bioluminescence. At 100 K, fluorescence band maxima are at 599 ± 2 nm and 563 ± 2 nm for the keto and enol forms, respectively, and at 300 K about 5 nm further to the red. The bare-ion spectra, free from solvent effects, serve as important references as they reveal whether a protein microenvironment redshifts or blueshifts the emission, and they serve as important benchmarks for nontrivial excited-state calculations.
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Besouros , Vaga-Lumes , Animais , Besouros/química , Besouros/metabolismo , Vaga-Lumes/química , Indóis/química , Luciferases/metabolismo , Pirazinas/química , Espectrometria de FluorescênciaRESUMO
The photophysics of green fluorescent protein (GFP) and red Kaede fluorescent protein (rKFP) are defined by the intrinsic properties of the light-absorbing chromophore and its interaction with the protein binding pocket. This work deploys photodissociation action spectroscopy to probe the absorption profiles for a series of synthetic GFP and rKFP chromophores as the bare anions and as complexes with the betaine zwitterion, which is assumed as a model for dipole microsolvation. Electronic structure calculations and energy decomposition analysis using Symmetry-Adapted Perturbation Theory are used to characterize gas-phase structures and complex cohesion forces. The calculations reveal a preponderance for coordination of betaine to the phenoxide deprotonation site predominantly through electrostatic forces. Calculations using the STEOM-DLPNO-CCSD method are able to reproduce absolute and relative vertical excitation energies for the bare anions and anion-betaine complexes. On the other hand, treatment of the betaine molecule with a point-charge model, in which the charges are computed from some common electron density population analysis schemes, show that just electrostatic and point-charge induction interactions are unable to account for the betaine-induced spectral shift. The present methodology could be applied to investigate cluster forces and optical properties in other gas-phase ion-zwitterion complexes.
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Eletricidade Estática , Ânions/química , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/química , Análise EspectralRESUMO
While action spectroscopy of cold molecular ions is a well-established technique to provide vibrationally resolved absorption features, fluorescence experiments are still challenging. Here we report the fluorescence spectra of pyronin-Y and resorufin ions at 100 K using a newly constructed setup. Spectra narrow upon cooling, and the emission maxima blueshift. Temperature effects are attributed to the population of vibrational excited levels in S1, and that frequencies are lower in S1 than in S0. This picture is supported by calculated spectra based on a Franck-Condon model that not only predicts the observed change in maximum, but also assigns Franck-Condon active vibrations. In-plane vibrational modes that preserve the mirror plane present in both S0 and S1 of resorufin and pyronin Y account for most of the observed vibrational bands. Finally, at low temperatures, it is important to pick an excitation wavelength as far to the red as possible to not reheat the ions.
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Here, we present a new instrument named LUNA2 (LUminescence iNstrument in Aarhus 2), which is purpose-built to measure dispersed fluorescence spectra of gaseous ions produced by electrospray ionization and cooled to low temperatures (<100 K). LUNA2 is, as an earlier room-temperature setup (LUNA), optimized for a high collection efficiency of photons and includes improvements based on our operational experience with LUNA. The fluorescence cell is a cylindrical Paul trap made of copper with a hole in the ring electrode to permit laser light to interact with the trapped ions, and one end-cap electrode is a mesh grid combined with an aspheric condenser lens. The entrance and exit electrodes are both in physical contact with the liquid-nitrogen cooling unit to reduce cooling times. Mass selection is done in a two-step scheme where, first, high-mass ions are ejected followed by low-mass ions according to the Mathieu stability region. This scheme may provide a higher mass resolution than when only one DC voltage is used. Ions are irradiated by visible light delivered from a nanosecond 20-Hz pulsed laser, and dispersed fluorescence is measured with a spectrometer combined with an iCCD camera that allows intensification of the signal for a short time interval. LUNA2 contains an additional Paul trap that can be used for mass selection before ions enter the fluorescence cell, which potentially is relevant to diminishing RF heating in the cold trap. Successful operation of the setup is demonstrated from experiments with rhodamine dyes and oxazine-4, and spectral changes with temperature are identified.
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The spectroscopic properties of chlorophyll (Chl) strongly depend on interactions with other Chl molecules, a fact that nature exploits in light harvesting by photosynthetic proteins. In solution, complex Chl aggregates are formed that depend not only on the solvent, but also on the detailed preparation procedure. Here we report synchrotron radiation circular dichroism (SRCD) spectra of Chlb in methanol (MeOH) and MeOH/H2O mixtures; in the latter, water molecules assist in the formation of Chl aggregates as Chlb is too hydrophobic to dissolve in water. The magnitude of the most prominent CD signal increases up to 100-fold over time (2-15 hours) when the water content is increased from 0 to 50% in volume, the signal is non-conservative (almost exclusively negative), and sensitive to sample preparation. Three different types of signature CD spectra (Types A to C) are identified depending on preparation, and the change in CD signal over time and with temperature is further analyzed with anisotropy spectroscopy (ratio of simultaneously recorded CD to absorption) and principal component analysis (PCA). We show that CD is clearly superior to pure absorption spectroscopy in identifying structural changes, and anisotropy spectroscopy further increases the sensitivity towards smaller structural changes. PCA on temperature dependent CD data show that depending on preparation, and thus the type of aggregate as revealed by the CD signature, either one (Type A) or two chiral species (Type B) are identified in the spectra, further evidencing the complex nature of Chlb aggregates. Furthermore, the CD signal decreases linearly with volume when a sample of Chlb in MeOH/H2O (i.e., a sample of Chlb aggregates) is diluted, which implies that the aggregation process is irreversible: once aggregates are formed, they largely do not revert back to monomers. However, anisotropy spectroscopy reveals that there are small changes in the aggregates, not directly noticeable in CD and absorption. The work presented here demonstrates, compared to absorption spectroscopy, a clear advantage of CD and anisotropy spectroscopy in studying the complex evolution of Chl samples with time and temperature.
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Clorofila/química , Metanol/química , Água/química , Anisotropia , Dicroísmo Circular , Espectrofotometria , TemperaturaRESUMO
Dye molecules based on the xanthene moiety are widely used as fluorescent probes in bioimaging and technological applications due to their large absorption cross-section for visible light and high fluorescence quantum yield. These applications require a clear understanding of the dye's inherent photophysics and the effect of a condensed-phase environment. Here, the gas-phase photophysics of the rose bengal doubly deprotonated dianion [RB - 2H]2-, deprotonated monoanion [RB - H]-, and doubly deprotonated radical anion [RB - 2H]â¢- is investigated using photodetachment, photoelectron, and dispersed fluorescence action spectroscopies, and tandem ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) coupled with laser excitation. For [RB - 2H]2-, photodetachment action spectroscopy reveals a clear band in the visible (450-580 nm) with vibronic structure. Electron affinity and repulsive Coulomb barrier (RCB) properties of the dianion are characterized using frequency-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy, revealing a decreased RCB compared with that of fluorescein dianions due to electron delocalization over halogen atoms. Monoanions [RB - H]- and [RB - 2H]â¢- differ in nominal mass by 1 Da but are difficult to study individually using action spectroscopies that isolate target ions using low-resolution mass spectrometry. This work shows that the two monoanions are readily distinguished and probed using the IMS-photo-IMS and photo-IMS-photo-IMS strategies, providing distinct but overlapping photodissociation action spectra in the visible spectral range. Gas-phase fluorescence was not detected from photoexcited [RB - 2H]2- due to rapid electron ejection. However, both [RB - H]- and [RB - 2H]â¢- show a weak fluorescence signal. The [RB - H]- action spectra show a large Stokes shift of â¼1700 cm-1, while the [RB - 2H]â¢- action spectra show no appreciable Stokes shift. This difference is explained by considering geometries of the ground and fluorescing states.
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Chlorophyll (Chl) pigments are responsible for vital mechanisms in photosynthetic proteins: light harvesting, energy transfer and charge separation. A complex interplay between the Chl molecule and its microenvironment determines its transition energy. Interactions such as excitonic coupling with one or more pigments (Chls or carotenoids), axial ligation to the magnesium center, or electrostatic interactions between Chl and nearby amino-acid residues all influence the photophysical properties. Here we use time-resolved photodissociation action spectroscopy to determine transition energies of Chla/b complexes in vacuo to directly compare the impact of a negatively charged axial ligand (formate) to that of exciton coupling between two Chls. Experiments carried out at the electrostatic ion storage ring ELISA allow dissociation to be sampled on hundreds of milliseconds time scale. Absorption-band maxima of Chla-formate complexes are found at 433 ± 4 nm/2.86 ± 0.03 eV (Soret band) and in the region 654-675 nm/1.84-1.90 eV (Q band) and those of Chla dimers tagged by a quaternary ammonium ion at 419 ± 5 nm/2.96 ± 0.04 eV (Soret band) and 647 nm/1.92 eV (Q band). The axial ligand strongly affects the Chla transition energies causing redshifts of 0.21 eV of the Soret band and 0.04-0.1 eV of the Q band compared to Chla tagged by a quaternary ammonium. Slightly smaller shifts were found in case of Chlb. The redshifts are approximately twice that induced by excitonic coupling between two Chlas, also tagged by a quaternary ammonium ion. Axial ligation brings the absorption by isolated Chls very close to that of photosynthetic proteins.
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Clorofila A/química , Clorofila/química , Cor , Formiatos/química , Compostos de Amônio Quaternário/química , Análise Espectral/métodosRESUMO
Förster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) between a photoexcited and a ground-state dye is dictated by how far apart the two dyes are compared to the Förster distance. While there is a significant number of studies on the process for biomacromolecules in solution, there are only a few reports on gas-phase FRET. Here we report on a simple gas-phase model system, synthesized with the rhodamine 575 (R575+) and rhodamine 640 (R640+) FRET pair and a covalent linker with four methylenes, R575+-(CH2)4-R640+. Each dye carries a positive charge which allows for mass-spectroscopy experiments. We have recorded gas-phase dispersed fluorescence spectra of the mass-selected dications excited at different wavelengths using the homebuilt LUNA (LUminescence iNstrument in Aarhus) setup and find in all cases that emission is exclusively from the R640+ acceptor dye. The linker does not interfere electronically with the dyes and simply acts as a spacer. We can therefore establish the direct effect of the interaction between the two dyes when it comes to emission band maximum. Indeed, we find that R640+ experiences a significant shift in its maximum from 560 ± 1 nm for the monomer cation to 577 ± 2 nm in the presence of R575+, independent of initial excitation of R575+ or R640+. This redshift is ascribed to the large polarizability along the long axis of the xanthene core structure, and that this polarizability is larger in the excited state than in the ground state. Experiments were also done on a triply charged 11-mer peptide labelled with the same two dyes, R575+-(Gly-Gln)5-Lys-R640+ + H+ (Gly = glycine, Gln = glutamine, and Lys = lysine) where the extra positive charge is located on the peptide. Again a redshifted emission spectrum of the donor is observed with maximum at 582 ± 2 nm. Our work clearly demonstrates strong sensitivity of the photophysics of one dye to the nearby environment, and that caution is needed when using the energy transfer efficiency to infer dye-dye separations in gas-phase experiments.
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Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Gases/química , Rodaminas/química , Transferência Ressonante de Energia de Fluorescência/métodos , Corantes Fluorescentes/efeitos da radiação , Gases/efeitos da radiação , Luz , Estrutura Molecular , Oligopeptídeos/química , Rodaminas/efeitos da radiação , Eletricidade EstáticaRESUMO
Gaseous fluorescein monoanions are weakly fluorescent; they display a broad fluorescence spectrum and a large Stokes shift. This contrasts with the situation in aqueous solution. One explanation of the intriguing behavior in vacuo is based on internal proton transfer from the pendant carboxyphenyl group to one of the xanthene oxygens in the excited state; another that rotation of the carboxyphenyl group relative to the xanthene leads to a partial charge transfer from one chromophore (xanthene) to the other (carboxyphenyl) when the π orbitals start to overlap. To shed light on the mechanism at play, we synthesized two fluorescein derivatives where the carboxylic acid group is replaced with either an ester or a tertiary amide functionality and explored their gas-phase ion fluorescence using the home-built LUminescence iNstrument in Aarhus (LUNA) setup. Results on the fluorescein methyl ester that has no acidic proton clearly disprove the former explanation: The spectrum remains broad, and the band center (at 605 nm) is shifted even more to the red than that of fluorescein (590 nm). Experiments on the other variant that contains a piperidino amide are also in favor of the second explanation as here the piperidino already causes the dihedral angle between the planes defining the xanthene and the benzene ring to be less than 90° in the ground state (i.e., 63°), according to density functional theory calculations. As a result of the closer similarity between the ground-state and excited-state structures, the fluorescence spectrum is narrower than those of the other two ions, and the band maximum is further to the blue (575 nm). In accordance with a more delocalized ground state of the amide derivative, action spectra associated with photoinduced dissociation recorded at another setup show that the absorption-band maximum for the amide derivative is redshifted compared to that of fluorescein (538 nm vs. 525 nm).
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The interplay between multiple chromophores in nucleic acids and photosynthetic proteins gives rise to complex electronic phenomena and largely governs the de-excitation dynamics. Electronic coupling between bases in the excited states of single strands of DNA and RNA may extend over several bases and likely protects nucleic acids from harmful UV damage. Here we report on the coupling between bases in single RNA strands of cytosine and find that the excited state is delocalized over up to five bases at neutral pH, where all bases are non-protonated (i.e. neutral). Delocalization is over four bases at 278 nm excitation, while it involves five bases at shorter wavelengths of 188 nm and 201 nm. This is in contrast to only nearest-neighbour interactions for corresponding DNA strands as previously reported. The current results seemingly corroborate earlier findings of larger spatial communication in RNA than in DNA strands of adenine, but there is no obvious link between the overall structure of strands and delocalization lengths. RNA cytosine strands form a tight helix, while comparatively, adenine strands show less tight packing, also compared to their DNA counterparts, and yet exhibit even higher delocalisation.
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Citosina/química , Citosina/efeitos da radiação , RNA/química , RNA/efeitos da radiação , Fenômenos Eletromagnéticos , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico/efeitos da radiação , Raios UltravioletaRESUMO
Chlorophyllsâ a and b (Chla/b) are responsible for light-harvesting by photosynthetic proteins in plants. They display broad absorption in the visible region with multiple bands, due to the asymmetry of the macrocycle and strong vibronic coupling. Their photophysics relies on the microenvironment, with regard to transition energies as well as quenching of triplet states. Here, we firmly establish the splitting of the Q and Soret bands into x- and y- polarized bands for the isolated molecules in vacuo, and resolve vibronic features. Storage-ring experiments reveal that dissociation of photoexcited charge-tagged complexes occurs over several milliseconds, but with two different time constants. A fast decay is ascribed to dissociation after internal conversion and a slow decay to the population of a triplet state that acts as a bottleneck. Support for the latter is provided by pump-probe experiments, where a second laser pulse probes the long-lived triplet state.
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Clorofila A/química , Clorofila/química , Transferência de Energia , Complexos de Proteínas Captadores de Luz/química , Fotossíntese , Plantas/metabolismo , Teoria Quântica , EspectrofotometriaRESUMO
Here we report gas-phase action and luminescence spectra of cationic dyes derived from oxazine: cresyl violet (CV+), oxazine 170 (Ox-170+), nile blue (NB+), darrow red (DR+), oxazine 1 (Ox-1+), oxazine 4 (Ox-4+), and brilliant cresyl blue (BCB+). The first four have a benzofused structure, which results in asymmetric charge distributions along the long axis. The positive charge is also asymmetrically distributed in BCB+ while Ox-1+ and Ox-4+ are symmetric. As the ions are isolated in vacuo, there are no interactions with solvent molecules or counter ions, and the effect of chemical modifications is therefore more easily revealed than from solution-phase experiments. The transition energy decreases in the order: DR+ > CV+ > Ox-4+ > Ox-170+ > BCB+ > Ox-1+ > NB+, and the fluorescence from BCB+ is less than from the others. We discuss the results based on electron delocalisation, degree of charge-transfer character, rigidity of the chromophore structure, and substituents.