RESUMEN
The UV-induced photo-relaxation dynamics of 5-bromouracil (BrU) and 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrUrd) in aqueous solution were investigated using femtosecond time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy with an extreme ultraviolet (XUV) probe in a flat liquid jet. Upon excitation to the 1ππ* state by 4.66 eV UV photons, both molecules exhibited rapid relaxation into lower-lying electronic states followed by decay to the S0 ground state. By employing a 21.7 eV XUV probe pulse, we were able to differentiate the relaxation of the excited state population from the initially excited 1ππ* state to an intermediate electronic state with 100 fs. Computational results identify this intermediate as the 1πσ* excited state, accessed by a 1ππ*/1πσ* conical intersection, and the signal from this intermediate state disappears within â¼200 fs. In contrast to thymine, formation of neither the 1nπ* state nor a long-lived triplet state was observed. Although the 1πσ* state is largely repulsive, prior studies have reported a low quantum yield for dissociation, and we observe weak signals that are consistent with production of hot S0 ground state (for BrUrd) on a time scale of 1.5-2 ps. It thus appears that solvent caging effects limit the dissociation yield in solution.
RESUMEN
Time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy using an extreme-ultraviolet (XUV) probe pulse was used to investigate the UV photoinduced dynamics of adenine (Ade), adenosine (Ado), and adenosine-5-monophosphate (AMP) in a liquid water jet. In contrast to previous studies using UV probe pulses, the XUV pulse at 21.7 eV can photoionize all excited states of a molecule, allowing for full relaxation pathways to be addressed after excitation at 4.66 eV. This work was carried out using a gas-dynamic flat liquid jet, resulting in considerably enhanced signal compared to a cylindrical jet. All three species decay on multiple time scales that are assigned based on their decay associated spectra; the fastest decay of â¼100 fs is assigned to ππ* decay to the ground state, while a smaller component with a lifetime of â¼500 fs is attributed to the nπ* state. An additional slower channel in Ade is assigned to the 7H Ade conformer, as seen previously. This work demonstrates the capability of XUV-TRPES to disentangle non-adiabatic dynamics in an aqueous solution in a state-specific manner and represents the first identification of the nπ* state in the relaxation dynamics of adenine and its derivatives.