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Tracking structural solvent reorganization and recombination dynamics following e-photoabstraction from aqueous I-with femtosecond x-ray spectroscopy and scattering

Authors :
Peter Vester
Katharina Kubicek
Roberto Alonso-Mori
Tadesse Assefa
Elisa Biasin
Morten Christensen
Asmus O. Dohn
Tim B. van Driel
Andreas Galler
Wojciech Gawelda
Tobias C. B. Harlang
Niels E. Henriksen
Kasper S. Kjær
Thomas S. Kuhlman
Zoltán Németh
Zhangatay Nurekeyev
Mátyás Pápai
Jochen Rittman
György Vankó
Hasan Yavas
Diana B. Zederkof
Uwe Bergmann
Martin M. Nielsen
Klaus B. Møller
Kristoffer Haldrup
Christian Bressler
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present a sub-picosecond resolved investigation of the structural solvent reorganization and geminate recombination dynamics following 400 nm two-photon excitation and photodetachment of a valence p electron from the aqueous atomic solute, I−(aq). The measurements utilized time-resolved X-ray Absorption Near Edge Structure (TR-XANES) spectroscopy and X-ray Solution Scattering (TR-XSS) at the Linac Coherent Light Source x-ray free electron laser in a laser pump/x-ray probe experiment. The XANES measurements around the L1-edge of the generated nascent iodine atoms (I0) yield an average electron ejection distance from the iodine parent of 7.4 ± 1.5 Å with an excitation yield of about 1/3 of the 0.1M NaI aqueous solution. The kinetic traces of the XANES measurement are in agreement with a purely diffusion-driven geminate iodine–electron recombination model without the need for a long-lived (I0:e−) contact pair. Nonequilibrium classical molecular dynamics simulations indicate a delayed response of the caging H2O solvent shell and this is supported by the structural analysis of the XSS data: We identify a two-step process exhibiting a 0.1 ps delayed solvent shell reorganization time within the tight H-bond network and a 0.3 ps time constant for the mean iodine–oxygen distance changes. The results indicate that most of the reorganization can be explained classically by a transition from a hydrophilic cavity with a well-ordered first solvation shell (hydrogens pointing toward I−) to an expanded cavity around I0 with a more random orientation of the H2O molecules in a broadened first solvation shell.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9a7b77f874022c99b09d9f1dfd6f0662