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Dive into the research topics where Anne B. Stephansen is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne B. Stephansen.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

The Influence of Push−Pull States on the Ultrafast Intersystem Crossing in Nitroaromatics

Rafael López-Arteaga; Anne B. Stephansen; Cesar A. Guarin; Theis I. Sølling; Jorge Peon

The photochemistry of nitro-substituted polyaromatic compounds is generally determined by the rapid decay of its S1 state and the rapid population of its triplet manifold. Previous studies have shown that such an efficient channel is due to a strong coupling of the fluorescent state with specific upper receiver states in the triplet manifold. Here we examine variations in this mechanism through the comparison of the photophysics of 2-nitrofluorene with that of 2-diethylamino-7-nitrofluorene. The only difference between these two molecules is the presence of a diethylamino group in a push-pull configuration for the latter compound. The femtosecond-resolved experiments presented herein indicate that 2-nitrofluorene shows ultrafast intersystem crossing which depopulates the S1 emissive state within less than a picosecond. On the other hand, the amino substituted nitrofluorene shows a marked shift in its S1 energy redounding in the loss of coupling with the receiver triplet state, and therefore a much longer lifetime of 100 ps in cyclohexane. In polar solvents, the diethylamino substituted compound actually shows double peaked fluorescence due to the formation of charge transfer states. Evaluation of the Stokes shifts in different solvents indicates that both bands correspond to intramolecular charge transfer states in equilibrium which are formed in an ultrafast time scale from the original locally excited (LE) state. The present study addresses the interplay between electron-donating and nitro substituents, showing that the addition of the electron-donating amino group is able to change the coupling with the triplet states due to a stabilization of the first excited singlet state and the rapid formation of charge transfer states in polar solvents. We include calculations at the TD-DFT level of theory with the PBE0 and B3LYP functionals which nicely predict the observed difference between the two compounds, showing how the specific S(π-π*)-T(n-π*) coupling normally prevalent in nitroaromatics is lost in the push-pull compound.


ChemPhysChem | 2013

The Non-Ergodic Nature of Internal Conversion

Theis I. Sølling; Thomas Scheby Kuhlman; Anne B. Stephansen; Liv B. Klein; Klaus B. Møller

The absorption of light by molecules can induce ultrafast dynamics and coupling of electronic and nuclear vibrational motion. The ultrafast nature in many cases rests on the importance of several potential energy surfaces in guiding the nuclear motion-a concept of central importance in many aspects of chemical reaction dynamics. This Minireview focuses on the non-ergodic nature of internal conversion, that is, on the concept that the nuclear dynamics only sample a reduced phase space, potentially resulting in localization of the dynamics in real space. A series of results that highlight the nonstatistical nature of the excited-state deactivation process is presented. The examples are categorized into four groups. 1) Localization of the energy in one degree of freedom in S2 →S1 transitions, in which the transition is either determined by the time spent in the S2 →S1 coupling region or by the time it takes to reach it. 2) Localization of energy into a single reactive mode, which is dictated by the internal conversion process. 3) Initiation of the internal conversion by activation of a single complex motion, which then specifically couples to a reactive mode. 4) Nonstatistical internal conversion as a tool to accomplish biomolecular stability. Herein, the discussion on nonstatistical internal conversion in DNA as a mechanism to eliminate electronic excitation energy is extended to include molecules with an S-S bond as a model of the disulfide bridge in peptides. All of these examples are summed up in Kashas rule. For systems with multiple degrees of freedom it will be possible to locate an appropriate motion somewhere in phase space that will take the wavepacket to the coupling region and facilitate an ultrafast transition to S1. Once at S1, the momentum of the wavepacket is lost and the only options left are the statistical processes of reaction or light emission.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

Dynamics of dipole- and valence bound anions in iodide-adenine binary complexes: A time-resolved photoelectron imaging and quantum mechanical investigation.

Anne B. Stephansen; Sarah B. King; Yuki Yokoi; Yusuke Minoshima; Wei-Li Li; Alice Kunin; Toshiyuki Takayanagi; Daniel M. Neumark

Dipole bound (DB) and valence bound (VB) anions of binary iodide-adenine complexes have been studied using one-color and time-resolved photoelectron imaging at excitation energies near the vertical detachment energy. The experiments are complemented by quantum chemical calculations. One-color spectra show evidence for two adenine tautomers, the canonical, biologically relevant A9 tautomer and the A3 tautomer. In the UV-pump/IR-probe time-resolved experiments, transient adenine anions can be formed by electron transfer from the iodide. These experiments show signals from both DB and VB states of adenine anions formed on femto- and picosecond time scales, respectively. Analysis of the spectra and comparison with calculations suggest that while both the A9 and A3 tautomers contribute to the DB signal, only the DB state of the A3 tautomer undergoes a transition to the VB anion. The VB anion of A9 is higher in energy than both the DB anion and the neutral, and the VB anion is therefore not accessible through the DB state. Experimental evidence of the metastable A9 VB anion is instead observed as a shape resonance in the one-color photoelectron spectra, as a result of UV absorption by A9 and subsequent electron transfer from iodide into the empty π-orbital. In contrast, the iodide-A3 complex constitutes an excellent example of how DB states can act as doorway state for VB anion formation when the VB state is energetically available.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Surprising Intrinsic Photostability of the Disulfide Bridge Common in Proteins

Anne B. Stephansen; Rasmus Y. Brogaard; Thomas Scheby Kuhlman; Liv B. Klein; Jørn B. Christensen; Theis I. Sølling

For a molecule to survive evolution and to become a key building block in nature, photochemical stability is essential. The photolytically weak S-S bond does not immediately seem to possess that ability. We mapped the real-time motion of the two sulfur radicals that result from disulfide photolysis on the femtosecond time scale and found the reason for the existence of the S-S bridge as a natural building block in folded structures. The sulfur atoms will indeed move apart on the excited state but only to oscillate around the S-S center of mass. At long S-S distances, there is a strong coupling to the ground state, and the oscillatory motion enables the molecules to continuously revisit that particular region of the potential energy surface. When a structural feature such as a ring prevents the sulfur radicals from flying apart and thus assures a sufficient residence time in the active region of the potential energy surface, the electronic energy is converted into less harmful vibrational energy, thereby restoring the S-S bond in the ground state.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2016

Transient IR Spectroscopic Observation of Singlet and Triplet States of 2-Nitrofluorene: Revisiting the Photophysics of Nitroaromatics

Martin A. B. Larsen; Jan Thøgersen; Anne B. Stephansen; Jorge Peon; Theis I. Sølling; S. R. Keiding

The dynamics of 2-nitrofluorene (2-NF) in deuterated acetonitrile is studied using UV pump, IR probe femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Upon excitation to the vibrationally excited S1 state, the excited-state population of 2-NF branches into two different relaxation pathways. One route leads to intersystem crossing (ISC) to the triplet manifold within a few hundred femtoseconds and the other to internal conversion (IC) to the ground state. The experiments indicate that after relaxation to the energetic minimum on S1, 2-NF undergoes internal conversion to the ground state in about 15 ps. IC within the triplet manifold is also observed as the initially populated triplet state relaxes to T1 in about 6 ps. Rotational anisotropy measurements corroborate the assignment of the transient IR frequencies and indicate a rotational diffusion time of 2-NF in the solvent of about 14 ps. The combined set of results provides a unified picture of the dynamics in photoexcited 2-NF. This to our knowledge is the first example using femtosecond vibrational spectroscopy for the study of the fundamental photoinduced processes in nitroaromatic compounds.


Structural Dynamics | 2017

Distortion dependent intersystem crossing: A femtosecond time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy study of benzene, toluene, and p-xylene

Anne B. Stephansen; Theis I. Sølling

The competition between ultrafast intersystem crossing and internal conversion in benzene, toluene, and p-xylene is investigated with time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy and quantum chemical calculations. By exciting to S2 out-of-plane symmetry breaking, distortions are activated at early times whereupon spin-forbidden intersystem crossing becomes (partly) allowed. Natural bond orbital analysis suggests that the pinnacle carbon atoms distorting from the aromatic plane change hybridization between the planar Franck-Condon geometry and the deformed (boat-shaped) S2 equilibrium geometry. The effect is observed to increase in the presence of methyl-groups on the pinnacle carbon-atoms, where largest extents of σ and π orbital-mixing are observed. This is fully consistent with the time-resolved spectroscopy data: Toluene and p-xylene show evidence for ultrafast triplet formation competing with internal conversion, while benzene appears to only decay via internal conversion within the singlet manifold. For toluene and p-xylene, internal conversion to S1 and intersystem crossing to T3 occur within the time-resolution of our instrument. The receiver triplet state (T3) is found to undergo internal conversion in the triplet manifold within ≈100–150 fs (toluene) or ≈180–200 fs (p-xylene) as demonstrated by matching rise and decay components of upper and lower triplet states. Overall, the effect of methylation is found to both increase the intersystem crossing probability and direct the molecular axis of the excited state dynamics.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2017

Conserving Coherence and Storing Energy during Internal Conversion: Photoinduced Dynamics of cis- and trans-Azobenzene Radical Cations

Kristin Munkerup; Dmitri A. Romanov; Timothy Bohinski; Anne B. Stephansen; Robert J. Levis; Theis I. Sølling

Light harvesting via energy storage in azobenzene has been a key topic for decades and the process of energy distribution over the molecular degrees of freedom following photoexcitation remains to be understood. Dynamics of a photoexcited system can exhibit high degrees of nonergodicity when it is driven by just a few degrees of freedom. Typically, an internal conversion leads to the loss of such localization of dynamics as the intramolecular energy becomes statistically redistributed over all molecular degrees of freedom. Here, we present a unique case where the excitation energy remains localized even subsequent to internal conversion. Strong-field ionization is used to prepare cis- and trans-azobenzene radical cations on the D1 surface with little excess energy at the equilibrium neutral geometry. These D1 ions are preferably formed because in this case D1 and D0 switch place in the presence of the strong laser field. The postionization dynamics are dictated by the potential energy landscape. The D1 surface is steep downhill along the cis/trans isomerization coordinate and toward a common minimum shared by the two isomers in the region of D1/D0 conical intersection. Coherent cis/trans torsional motion along this coordinate is manifested in the ion transients by a cosine modulation. In this scenario, D0 becomes populated with molecules that are energized mainly along the cis-trans isomerization coordinate, with the kinetic energy above the cis-trans interconversion barrier. These activated azobenzene molecules easily cycle back and forth along the D0 surface and give rise to several periods of modulated signal before coherence is lost. This persistent localization of the internal energy during internal conversion is provided by the steep downhill potential energy surface, small initial internal energy content, and a strong hole-lone pair interaction that drives the molecule along the cis-trans isomerization coordinate to facilitate the transition between the involved electronic states.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014

Time-resolved radiation chemistry: Dynamics of electron attachment to uracil following UV excitation of iodide-uracil complexes

Sarah B. King; Margaret A. Yandell; Anne B. Stephansen; Daniel M. Neumark


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2015

Electron accommodation dynamics in the DNA base thymine

Sarah B. King; Anne B. Stephansen; Yuki Yokoi; Margaret A. Yandell; Alice Kunin; Toshiyuki Takayanagi; Daniel M. Neumark


Chemical Physics | 2014

On the photostability of the disulfide bond: An electronic or a structural property?

Anne B. Stephansen; Martin A. B. Larsen; Liv B. Klein; Theis I. Sølling

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Liv B. Klein

University of Copenhagen

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Daniel M. Neumark

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Sarah B. King

University of California

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Thomas Scheby Kuhlman

Technical University of Denmark

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Alice Kunin

University of California

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