• Broadband ultraviolet-visible transient absorption spectroscopy in the nanosecond to microsecond time domain with sub-nanosecond time resolution
    B. Lang, S. Mosquera-Vazquez, D. Lovy, P. Sherin, V. Markovic and E. Vauthey
    Review of Scientific Instruments, 84 (7) (2013), p73107
    DOI:10.1063/1.4812705 | unige:28965 | Abstract | Article HTML | Article PDF
 
A combination of sub-nanosecond photoexcitation and femtosecond supercontinuum probing is used to extend femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy into the nanosecond to microsecond time domain. Employing a passively Q-switched frequency tripled Nd:YAG laser and determining the jitter of the time delay between excitation and probe pulses with a high resolution time delay counter on a single-shot basis leads to a time resolution of 350 ps in picosecond excitation mode. The time overlap of almost an order of magnitude between fs and sub-ns excitation mode permits to extend ultrafast transient absorption (TA) experiments seamlessly into time ranges traditionally covered by laser flash photolysis. The broadband detection scheme eases the identification of intermediate reaction products which may remain undetected in single-wavelength detection flash photolysis arrangements. Single-shot referencing of the supercontinuum probe with two identical spectrometer/CCD arrangements yields an excellent signal-to-noise ratio for the so far investigated chromophores in short to moderate accumulation times.
  
Even flow: Photoinduced symmetry-breaking charge separation takes place in a few picoseconds in a 1,3-bis(perylene)propane dyad in polar solvents. Polarized transient absorption measurements show that the direction of the charge flow is random and entirely governed by the fluctuations of the solvent orientation around the dyad.
  • Photoinduced electron transfer reactions: from the elucidation of old problems towards the exploration of interfaces
    M. Fedoseeva, J. Grilj, O. Kel, M. Koch, R. Letrun, V. Markovic, I. Petkova, S. Richert, A. Rosspeintner, P. Sherin, D. Villamaina, B. Lang and E. Vauthey
    Chimia, 65 (2011), p350-352
    DOI:10.2533/chimia.2011.350 | unige:16760 | Abstract | Article PDF
The activities of our research group in the field of photoinduced electron transfer reactions are discussed and illustrated by several examples

Google

 


Redisplay in format 

                 

    in encoding 

  
Format for journal references
Format for book references
Last update Tuesday March 26 2024