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Dive into the research topics where Eric Ryan Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Ryan Smith.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

Polarized pump-probe measurements of electronic motion via a conical intersection.

Darcie A. Farrow; Wei Qian; Eric Ryan Smith; Allison Albrecht Ferro; David M. Jonas

Polarized femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy is used to observe electronic wavepacket motion for vibrational wavepackets centered on a conical intersection. After excitation of a doubly degenerate electronic state in a square symmetric silicon naphthalocyanine molecule, electronic motions cause a approximately 100 fs drop in the polarization anisotropy that can be quantitatively predicted from vibrational quantum beat modulations of the pump-probe signal. Vibrational symmetries are determined from the polarization anisotropy of the vibrational quantum beats. The polarization anisotropy of the totally symmetric vibrational quantum beats shows that the electronic wavepackets equilibrate via the conical intersection within approximately 200 fs. The relationship used to predict the initial electronic polarization anisotropy decay from the asymmetric vibrational quantum beat amplitudes indicates that the initial width of the vibrational wavepacket determines the initial speed of electronic wavepacket motion. For chemically reactive conical intersections, which can have 1000 times greater stabilization energies than the one observed here, the same theory predicts electronic equilibration within 2 fs. Such electronic movements would be the fastest known chemical processes.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2008

The polarization anisotropy of vibrational quantum beats in resonant pump-probe experiments: Diagrammatic calculations for square symmetric molecules.

Darcie A. Farrow; Eric Ryan Smith; Wei Qian; David M. Jonas

By analogy to the Raman depolarization ratio, vibrational quantum beats in pump-probe experiments depend on the relative pump and probe laser beam polarizations in a way that reflects vibrational symmetry. The polarization signatures differ from those in spontaneous Raman scattering because the order of field-matter interactions is different. Since pump-probe experiments are sensitive to vibrations on excited electronic states, the polarization anisotropy of vibrational quantum beats can also reflect electronic relaxation processes. Diagrammatic treatments, which expand use of the symmetry of the two-photon tensor to treat signal pathways with vibrational and vibronic coherences, are applied to find the polarization anisotropy of vibrational and vibronic quantum beats in pump-probe experiments for different stages of electronic relaxation in square symmetric molecules. Asymmetric vibrational quantum beats can be distinguished from asymmetric vibronic quantum beats by a pi phase jump near the center of the electronic spectrum and their disappearance in the impulsive limit. Beyond identification of vibrational symmetry, the vibrational quantum beat anisotropy can be used to determine if components of a doubly degenerate electronic state are unrelaxed, dephased, population exchanged, or completely equilibrated.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005

Response functions for dimers and square-symmetric molecules in four-wave-mixing experiments with polarized light

Eric Ryan Smith; Darcie A. Farrow; David M. Jonas

Four-wave-mixing nonlinear-response functions are given for intermolecular and intramolecular vibrations of a perpendicular dimer and intramolecular vibrations of a square-symmetric molecule containing a doubly degenerate state. A two-dimensional particle-in-a-box model is used to approximate the electronic wave functions and obtain harmonic potentials for nuclear motion. Vibronic interactions due to symmetry-lowering distortions along Jahn-Teller active normal modes are discussed. Electronic dephasing due to nuclear motion along both symmetric and asymmetric normal modes is included in these response functions, but population transfer between states is not. As an illustration, these response functions are used to predict the pump-probe polarization anisotropy in the limit of impulsive excitation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011

Alignment, Vibronic Level Splitting, and Coherent Coupling Effects on the Pump—Probe Polarization Anisotropy

Eric Ryan Smith; David M. Jonas

The pump-probe polarization anisotropy is computed for molecules with a nondegenerate ground state, two degenerate or nearly degenerate excited states with perpendicular transition dipoles, and no resonant excited-state absorption. Including finite pulse effects, the initial polarization anisotropy at zero pump-probe delay is predicted to be r(0) = 3/10 with coherent excitation. During pulse overlap, it is shown that the four-wave mixing classification of signal pathways as ground or excited state is not useful for pump-probe signals. Therefore, a reclassification useful for pump-probe experiments is proposed, and the coherent anisotropy is discussed in terms of a more general transition dipole and molecular axis alignment instead of experiment-dependent ground- versus excited-state pathways. Although coherent excitation enhances alignment of the transition dipole, the molecular axes are less aligned than for a single dipole transition, lowering the initial anisotropy. As the splitting between excited states increases beyond the laser bandwidth and absorption line width, the initial anisotropy increases from 3/10 to 4/10. Asymmetric vibrational coordinates that lift the degeneracy control the electronic energy gap and off-diagonal coupling between electronic states. These vibrations dephase coherence and equilibrate the populations of the (nearly) degenerate states, causing the anisotropy to decay (possibly with oscillations) to 1/10. Small amounts of asymmetric inhomogeneity (2 cm(-1)) cause rapid (130 fs) suppression of both vibrational and electronic anisotropy beats on the excited state, but not vibrational beats on the ground electronic state. Recent measurements of conical intersection dynamics in a silicon napthalocyanine revealed anisotropic quantum beats that had to be assigned to asymmetric vibrations on the ground electronic state only [Farrow, D. A.; J. Chem. Phys. 2008, 128, 144510]. Small environmental asymmetries likely explain the observed absence of excited-state asymmetric vibrations in those experiments.


Springer series in chemical physics | 2004

Measurement of Conical Intersection Dynamics by Impulsive Femtosecond Polarization Spectroscopy

Darcie A. Farrow; Wei Qian; Eric Ryan Smith; David M. Jonas

The ∼100 fs anisotropy decay from 0.4 toward 0.1 after excitation of a degenerate transition in a square molecule can be predicted from quantum beats of asymmetric vibrations and curve crossing at a conical intersection.


Archive | 2009

Femtosecond Electronic Dynamics via a Conical Funnel

Eric Ryan Smith; William Peters; David M. Jonas

Femtosecond polarization spectroscopy measures electronic wavepacket motion after vibrational wavepackets are excited near an energetically inaccessible conical intersection in a free-base naphthalocyanine. Partial equilibration via the conical funnel takes place within ~100 fs.


Archive | 2009

Propagation and beam geometry effects on 2D Fourier transform spectra of multi-level systems

Byungmoon Cho; Michael K. Yetzbacher; Katherine A. Kitney; Eric Ryan Smith; David M. Jonas

We calculate 4-level two-dimensional (2D) Fourier transform relaxation spectra with propagation and beam geometry distortions, which are 14% for an optical density of 0.2 and 25% for a crossing angle of 10°.


conference on lasers and electro optics | 2007

Femtosecond two-dimensional Fourier transform electronic spectroscopy

Michael K. Yetzbacher; Eric Ryan Smith; Byungmoon Cho; Katherine A. Kitney; David M. Jonas

Two-dimensional spectra are obtained by Fourier transformation of four-wave mixing signal fields with respect to time delays between femtosecond pulses. We discuss peak shapes, experimental distortions, and dispersion relations. Two-dimensional electronic spectra revealing solvent and electronic motion are used as illustrations.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2009

Propagation and Beam Geometry Effects on Two-Dimensional Fourier Transform Spectra of Multilevel Systems†

Byungmoon Cho; Michael K. Yetzbacher; Katherine A. Kitney; Eric Ryan Smith; David M. Jonas


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005

Publisher’s Note: “Response functions for dimers and square-symmetric molecules in four-wave-mixing experiments with polarized light” [J. Chem. Phys.123, 044102 (2005)]

Eric Ryan Smith; Darcie A. Farrow; David M. Jonas

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David M. Jonas

University of Colorado Boulder

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Darcie A. Farrow

University of Colorado Boulder

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Katherine A. Kitney

University of Colorado Boulder

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Michael K. Yetzbacher

University of Colorado Boulder

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William Peters

University of Colorado Boulder

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Byungmoon Cho

University of Colorado Boulder

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Wei Qian

University of Colorado Boulder

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Allison Albrecht Ferro

University of Colorado Boulder

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Trevor L. Courtney

University of Colorado Boulder

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