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Featured researches published by James N. Bull.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Absolute Total Electron Impact Ionization Cross-Sections for Many-Atom Organic and Halocarbon Species

James N. Bull; Peter W. Harland; Claire Vallance

The experimental determination of absolute total electron impact ionization cross-sections for polyatomic molecules has traditionally been a difficult task and restricted to a small range of species. This article reviews the performance of three models to estimate the maximum ionization cross-sections of some 65 polyatomic organic and halocarbon species. Cross-sections for all of the species studied have been measured experimentally using the same instrument, providing a complete data set for comparison with the model predictions. The three models studied are the empirical correlation between maximum ionization cross-section and molecular polarizability, the well-known binary encounter Bethe (BEB) model, and the functional group additivity model. The excellent agreement with experiment found for all three models, provided that calculated electronic structure parameters of suitably high quality are used for the first two, allows the prediction of total electron-impact ionization cross-sections to at least 7% precision for similar molecules that have not been experimentally characterized.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

Excited State Dynamics of the Isolated Green Fluorescent Protein Chromophore Anion Following UV Excitation

Christopher W. West; James N. Bull; Alex S. Hudson; Steven L. Cobb; Jan R. R. Verlet

A combined frequency-, angle-, and time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy study is used to unravel the excited state dynamics following UV excitation of the isolated anionic chromophore of the green fluorescent protein (GFP). The optically bright S3 state, which is populated for hv > 3.7 eV, is shown to decay predominantly by internal conversion to the S2 state that in turn autodetaches to the neutral ground state. For hv > 4.1 eV, a new and favorable autodetachment channel from the S2 state becomes available, which leads to the formation of the neutral in an excited state. The results indicate that the UV excited state dynamics of the GFP chromophore involve a number of strongly coupled excited states.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

On the Electron Affinity of Nitromethane (CH3NO2)

James N. Bull; Robert G. A. R. Maclagan; Peter W. Harland

A high-level systematic computational study is presented on an accurate value for the adiabatic valence electron affinity of nitromethane, CH(3)NO(2), to resolve literature disagreements in theoretical and experimental reported values. Density functional methods with triple-zeta quality basis sets gave good fortuitous agreement to early experimental determinations, while single-reference wave function based methods employing up to CCSD(T) gave poor or fortuitous agreement depending on the experimental reference value. DFT methods in general cannot accurately describe electron attachment from the result of unphysical self-interaction. It is found that multireference methods with aug-cc-pVTZ or similar basis sets are required to converge to an experimental value. Our highest level of theory 3S-MCQDPT2 and 7S-MCQDPT2 calculations with an aug-cc-pVTZ quality basis description yield values of 0.188 and 0.176 eV (0.170 eV with polynomial extrapolation), in excellent agreement with the most recent experimental value of 0.172 +/- 0.006 eV. CCSD(T)//aug-cc-pVTZ provides a fortuitously reasonable description. The isolated dipole-bound anion binding energy is tentatively calculated to be 7-8 meV.


Analytical Chemistry | 2016

Monitoring Isomerization of Molecules in Solution Using Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry

James N. Bull; Michael S. Scholz; Neville J. A. Coughlan; Akio Kawai; Evan J. Bieske

An ion mobility spectrometer (IMS) with an electrospray ion source is used to investigate photo and thermal isomerization of photoactive molecules in the electrospray syringe. A light emitting diode adjacent to the syringe establishes a photostationary state that relaxes thermally toward the more stable isomer once illumination ceases. The arrangement is demonstrated by measuring Z-E thermal isomerization rates for several azoheteroarene compounds. The IMS technique has a distinct advantage over UV-vis spectrophotometry for measuring isomer populations in situations where there are multiple isomers with overlapping absorption profiles. In another development, an LED array adjacent to the silica capillary connecting the syringe to the electrospray ion source, is used to activate photochromic molecules, and investigate sequential photoswitching events.


International Reviews in Physical Chemistry | 2016

Ultrafast dynamics of temporary anions probed through the prism of photodetachment

Cate S. Anstöter; James N. Bull; Jan R. R. Verlet

The recently developed method of frequency-, angle-, and time-resolved photoelectron imaging (FAT-PI) applied to the study of the dynamics of resonances of open-shell anions is reviewed. The basic principles of the method and its experimental realisation are outlined. The dynamics of a number of radical quinone anions is then considered. Firstly, we show for para-benzoquinone how frequency- and angle-resolved photoelectron imaging provides finger-prints of the dynamics of resonances and then how time-resolved photoelectron imaging yields deep mechanistic insight into the relaxation dynamics of the resonances. The effect of chemical substitutions of the para-quinone electrophore on the dynamics of resonances is discussed. Increasing the conjugation leads to a greatly enhanced ability for resonances to decay to the ground electronic state of the radical anion. Using time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy, it is shown that the dynamics are facilitated by a bound valence state of the anion. The addition of electron donating methoxy groups leads to a reduced ability to access the ground state compared to para-benzoquinone. Both time-resolved dynamics and calculations provide a rationale for these observations. We consider the benefits and limitations of FAT-PI and its complementarity to 2D electron spectroscopy.


Science Advances | 2017

Observation and ultrafast dynamics of a nonvalence correlation-bound state of an anion

James N. Bull; Jan R. R. Verlet

A nonvalence electronic state predominantly bound by correlation forces is spectroscopically characterized in a cluster anion. Nonvalence states of molecular anions play key roles in processes, such as electron mobility, in rare-gas liquids, radiation-induced damage to DNA, and the formation of anions in the interstellar medium. Recently, a class of nonvalence bound anion state has been predicted by theory in which correlation forces are predominantly responsible for binding the excess electron. We present a direct spectroscopic observation of this nonvalence correlation-bound state (CBS) in the para-toluquinone trimer cluster anion. Time-resolved photoelectron velocity map imaging shows that photodetachment of the CBS produces a narrow and highly anisotropic photoelectron distribution, consistent with detachment from an s-like orbital. The CBS is bound by ~50 meV and decays by vibration-mediated autodetachment with a lifetime of 700 ± 100 fs. These states are likely to be common in large and/or polarizable anions and clusters and may act as doorway states in electron attachment processes.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018

Photoswitching an Isolated Donor–Acceptor Stenhouse Adduct

James N. Bull; Eduardo Carrascosa; Neil Mallo; Michael S. Scholz; Gabriel da Silva; Jonathon E. Beves; Evan J. Bieske

Donor-acceptor Stenhouse adducts (DASAs) are a new class of photoswitching molecules with excellent fatigue resistance and synthetic tunability. Here, tandem ion mobility mass spectrometry coupled with laser excitation is used to characterize the photocyclization reaction of isolated, charge-tagged DASA molecules over the 450-580 nm range. The experimental maximum response at 530 nm agrees with multireference perturbation theory calculations for the S1 ← S0 transition maximum at 533 nm. Photocyclization in the gas phase involves absorption of at least two photons; the first photon induces Z-E isomerization from the linear isomer to metastable intermediate isomers, while the second photon drives another E-Z isomerization and 4π-electrocyclization reaction. Cyclization is thermally reversible in the gas phase with collisional excitation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2017

Photoisomerization of Protonated Azobenzenes in the Gas Phase

Michael S. Scholz; James N. Bull; Neville J. A. Coughlan; Eduardo Carrascosa; Brian D. Adamson; Evan J. Bieske

Because of their high photoisomerization efficiencies, azobenzenes and their functionalized derivatives are used in a broad range of molecular photoswitches. Here, the photochemical properties of the trans isomers of protonated azobenzene (ABH+) and protonated 4-aminoazobenzene (NH2ABH+) cations are investigated in the gas phase using a tandem ion mobility spectrometer. Both cations display a strong photoisomerization response across their S1 ← S0 bands, with peaks in their photoisomerization yields at 435 and 525 nm, respectively, red-shifted with respect to the electronic absorption bands of the unprotonated AB and NH2AB molecules. The experimental results are interpreted with the aid of supporting electronic structure calculations considering the relative stabilities and geometries of the possible isomers and protomers and vertical electronic excitation energies.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Time-Resolved Photodetachment Anisotropy: Gas-Phase Rotational and Vibrational Dynamics of the Fluorescein Anion.

Daniel A. Horke; Adam S. Chatterley; James N. Bull; Jan R. R. Verlet

The photoelectron signal of the singly deprotonated fluorescein anion is found to be highly dependent on the relative polarization between pump and probe pulses, and time-resolved photodetachment anisotropy (TR-PA) is developed as a probe of the rotational dynamics of the chromophore. The total photoelectron signal shows both rotational and vibrational wavepacket dynamics, and we demonstrate how TR-PA can readily disentangle these dynamical processes. TR-PA in fluorescein presents specific opportunities for its development as a probe for rotational dynamics in large biomolecules as fluorescein derivatives are commonly incorporated in complex biomolecules and have been used extensively in time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy measurements, to which TR-PA is a gas-phase analogue.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2017

Protomer-Specific Photochemistry Investigated Using Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry

James N. Bull; Neville J. A. Coughlan; Evan J. Bieske

The utility of tandem ion mobility mass spectrometry coupled with electronic spectroscopy to investigate protomer-specific photochemistry is demonstrated by measuring the photoisomerization response for protomers of protonated 4-dicyanomethylene-2-methyl-6-para-dimethylaminostyryl-4H-pyran (DCM) molecules. The target DCMH+ species has three protomers that are distinguished by their different collision cross sections with He, N2, and CO2 buffer gases, trends in abundance with ion source conditions, and from their photoisomerization responses. The trans-DCMH+ protomers with the proton located either on the tertiary amine N atom or on a cyano group N atom exhibit distinct S1← S0 photoisomerization responses, with the maxima in their photoisomerization action spectra occurring at 420 and 625 nm, respectively, consistent with predictions from accompanying electronic structure calculations. The cis-DCMH+ protomers are not distinguishable from one another through ion mobility separation and give no discernible photoisomerization or photodissociation response, suggesting the dominance of other deactivation pathways such as fluorescence. The study demonstrates that isobaric protomers and isomers generated by an electrospray ion source can possess quite different photochemical behaviors and emphasizes the utility of isomer and protomer selective techniques for exploring the spectroscopic and photochemical properties of protonated molecules in the gas phase.

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