New publication in PRL, also highlighted on the SB news
Ultrafast X-Ray Spectroscopy of Conical Intersections
Ongoing developments in ultrafast x-ray sources offer powerful new means of probing the complex nonadiabatically coupled structural and electronic dynamics of photoexcited molecules. These non-Born-Oppenheimer effects are governed by general electronic degeneracies termed conical intersections, which play a key role, analogous to that of a transition state, in the electronic-nuclear dynamics of excited molecules. Using high-level ab initio quantum dynamics simulations, we studied time-resolved x-ray absorption (TRXAS) and photoelectron spectroscopy (TRXPS) of the prototypical unsaturated organic chromophore, ethylene, following excitation to its S2(ππ∗) state. The TRXAS, in particular, is highly sensitive to all aspects of the ensuing dynamics. These x-ray spectroscopies provide a clear signature of the wave packet dynamics near conical intersections, related to charge localization effects driven by the nuclear dynamics. Given the ubiquity of charge localization in excited state dynamics, we believe that ultrafast x-ray spectroscopies offer a unique
Swiss National Science Foundation via the NCCR:MUST, National Science and Energy Research Council of Canada (Discovery Grants program)
https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.243001
https://actu.epfl.ch/news/tracking-energy-flow-in-large-molecules/
Simon P. Neville, Majed Chergui, Albert Stolow, Michael S. Schuurman.
Physical Review Letters 120, 12 June 2018.