Toshiyuki Kusumoto
Osaka City University
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Featured researches published by Toshiyuki Kusumoto.
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011
Daisuke Kosumi; Toshiyuki Kusumoto; Ritsuko Fujii; Mitsuru Sugisaki; Yoshiro Iinuma; Naohiro Oka; Yuki Takaesu; Tomonori Taira; Masahiko Iha; Harry A. Frank; Hideki Hashimoto
Carotenoids containing a carbonyl group in conjugation with their polyene backbone are naturally-occurring pigments in marine organisms and are essential to the photosynthetic light-harvesting function in aquatic algae. These carotenoids exhibit spectral characteristics attributed to an intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) state that arise in polar solvents due to the presence of the carbonyl group. Here, we report the spectroscopic properties of the carbonyl carotenoid fucoxanthin in polar (methanol) and nonpolar (cyclohexane) solvents studied by steady-state absorption and femtosecond pump-probe measurements. Transient absorption associated with the optically forbidden S(1) (2(1)A) state and/or the ICT state were observed following one-photon excitation to the optically allowed S(2) (1(1)B) state in methanol. The transient absorption measurements carried out in methanol showed that the ratio of the ICT-to-S(1) state formation increased with decreasing excitation energy. We also showed that the ICT character was clearly visible in the steady-state absorption in methanol based on a Franck-Condon analysis. The results suggest that two spectroscopic forms of fucoxanthin, blue and red, exist in the polar environment.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011
Askat E. Jailaubekov; Mikas Vengris; Sang-Hun Song; Toshiyuki Kusumoto; Hideki Hashimoto; Delmar S. Larsen
The femtosecond to nanosecond dynamics of the all-trans β-carotene carotenoid dissolved in 3-methylpentane is characterized and dissected with excitation-wavelength and temperature-dependent ultrafast dispersed transient absorption signals. The kinetics measured after red-edge (490 nm) and blue-edge (400 nm) excitation were contrasted under fluid solvent (298 K) and rigid glass (77 K) conditions. In all four measured data sets, the S* population kinetics was resolved prompting the development of a modified multicompartment model. The temperature-dependent and excitation wavelength-dependent S* quantum yield is ascribed to a competition of population surmounting a weak (55 cm(-1)) energy barrier on the S(2) state to favor S(1) generation and rapid internal conversion that favors S* generation. When cooled from room temperature to 77 K, the S* decay time scale shifted significantly from 30 to 400 ps, which is ascribed to small-scale structural relaxation with a 115 cm(-1) energy barrier. For the first time under low-energy excitation conditions, the triplet state is observed and confirmed to not originate from S* or S(1), but from S(2). The interconnectivity of the S* and S(1) populations is discussed, and no observed population flow is resolved between S* and S(1). Comparison of samples obtained from different laboratories with different purity levels demonstrates that sample contamination is not the primary origin of the S* state.
Organic Letters | 2009
Takayuki Kajikawa; Shinji Hasegawa; Takashi Iwashita; Toshiyuki Kusumoto; Hideki Hashimoto; Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki; Harry A. Frank; Shigeo Katsumura
Peridinin, a nor-carotenoid, exhibits an exceptionally high energy transfer efficiency to chlorophyll a in photosynthesis in the sea. This efficiency would be related to the unique structure of peridinin. To answer the question of why peridinin possesses the irregular C37 skeleton, we have achieved the synthesis of three peridinin derivatives. Their ultrafast time-resolved optical absorption and Stark spectra measurements have shown the presence of the characteristic intramolecular charge transfer state and the featured electrostatic properties of peridinin.
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2009
Takayuki Kajikawa; Kazuyoshi Aoki; Ram Shanker Singh; Takashi Iwashita; Toshiyuki Kusumoto; Harry A. Frank; Hideki Hashimoto; Shigeo Katsumura
Peridinin is known as the main light-harvesting pigment in photosynthesis in the sea and exhibits exceptionally high energy transfer efficiencies to chlorophyll a. This energy transfer efficiency is thought to be related to the intricate structure of peridinin, which possesses allene and ylidenbutenolide functions in the polyene backbone. There are, however, no studies on the relationship between the structural features of peridinin and its super ability for energy transfer. We then focused on the subjects of why peridinin possesses a unique allene group and how the allene function plays a role in the exceptionally high energy transfer. Toward elucidation of the exact role of the allene function, we now describe the syntheses of three relatively unstable allene-modified derivatives of peridinin along with the results of the Stark spectroscopy of peridinin and the synthesized peridinin derivatives.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011
Toshiyuki Kusumoto; Daisuke Kosumi; Chiasa Uragami; Harry A. Frank; Robert R. Birge; Richard J. Cogdell; Hideki Hashimoto
The photophysical properties of a carbonyl-containing carotenoid analogue in an s-cis configuration, relative to the conjugated π system, 2-(all-trans-retinylidene)-indan-1,3-dione (C20Ind), were investigated by femtosecond time-resolved spectroscopy in various solvents. The lifetime of the optically forbidden S(1) state of C20Ind becomes long as solvent polarity increases. This trend is completely opposite to the situation of S(1-ICT) dynamics of carbonyl-containing carotenoids, such as peridinin and fucoxanthin. Excitation energy dependence of the transient absorption measurements shows that the transient absorption spectra in nonpolar solvents were originated from two distinct transient species, while those in polar and protic solvents are due to a single transient species. By referring to the results of MNDO-PSDCI (modified neglect of differential overlap with partial single- and double-configuration interaction) calculations, we conclude: (1) in polar and protic solvents, the S(1) state is generated following excitation up to the S(2) state; (2) in nonpolar solvents, however, both the S(1) and the (1)nπ* states are generated; and (3) C20Ind does not generate the S(1-ICT) state, despite the fact that it has two conjugated carbonyl groups.
Applied Physics Letters | 2010
Katsuichi Kanemoto; Akihiko Ogata; Nobuyuki Inoue; Toshiyuki Kusumoto; Hideki Hashimoto; Ichiro Akai; T. Karasawa
We have performed spectroscopic measurements combining with the diode operation of [6,6]-phenyl C61 butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) for directly characterizing the nature of its n-carriers. The measurements in the visible region reveal that electrons for the n-carrier generation are primarily accommodated into the t1g and t1u levels. The measurements in the near-infrared region indicate that the n-carriers of the PCBM diode are delocalized compared to the PCBM anions in solution. We also show that the frequency-dependence of the spectroscopic signals can estimate the lifetime of the n-carriers in the PCBM diode (23 μs).
International Conference on Ultrafast Phenomena (2010), paper ME14 | 2010
Daisuke Kosumi; Satoshi Maruta; Toshiyuki Kusumoto; Ritsuko Fujii; Mitsuru Sugisaki; Masahiko Iha; Harry A. Frank; Hideki Hashimoto
The ultrafast excited state dynamics of fucoxanthin in a polar solvent have been investigated by femtosecond one- and two-photon pump-probe spectroscopic measurements. Transient absorption spectra and their kinetics depend strongly on excitation energy.
Chemical Physics Letters | 2009
Daisuke Kosumi; Toshiyuki Kusumoto; Ritsuko Fujii; Mitsuru Sugisaki; Yoshiro Iinuma; Naohiro Oka; Yuki Takaesu; Tomonori Taira; Masahiko Iha; Harry A. Frank; Hideki Hashimoto
Journal of Luminescence | 2011
Daisuke Kosumi; Toshiyuki Kusumoto; Ritsuko Fujii; Mitsuru Sugisaki; Yoshiro Iinuma; Naohiro Oka; Yuki Takaesu; Tomonori Taira; Masahiko Iha; Harry A. Frank; Hideki Hashimoto
Dalton Transactions | 2008
Makoto Obata; Asuka Kitamura; Akemi Mori; Chiaki Kameyama; Justyna A. Czaplewska; Rika Tanaka; Isamu Kinoshita; Toshiyuki Kusumoto; Hideki Hashimoto; Masafumi Harada; Yuji Mikata; Takuzo Funabiki; Shigenobu Yano