Publications by authors named "Marcus Motzkus"

Singlet fission (SF) is a process by which one excited singlet state yields two triplet states upon close interaction with a ground-state chromophore of the same kind. This photoreaction was first observed in solid state and has important implications in organic photovoltaics. Singlet fission was also reported in concentrated solutions, where the need for diffusion of the reaction partners slows the dynamics.

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Charge carrier multiplication via singlet fission into two triplet states has the potential to increase efficiencies of photovoltaics by one-third due to the reduction of thermalization losses. In the present work, we investigate tetraazaperopyrenes, a class of -heteropolycyles, as suitable singlet fission candidates. Using a combined experimental and theoretical approach, fundamentally different mechanisms for triplet formation in solution and thin film are identified.

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Generating two long-living low-energy excitations after absorption of a single high-energy photon has stoked interest in singlet fission (SF) to enhance solar energy conversion in photovoltaics. To this end, survival of the triplet states is critical. This process is investigated in diethynylbenzene-linked tetraaza-triisopropylsilylethynyl-pentacene dimers, for which SF is energetically feasible and facilitated by the close distances between the azapentacenes.

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Singlet fission is the photoinduced conversion of a singlet exciton into two triplet states of half-energy. This multiplication mechanism has been successfully applied to improve the efficiency of single-junction solar cells in the visible spectral range. Here we show that singlet fission may also occur via a sequential mechanism, where the two triplet states are generated consecutively by exploiting oxygen as a catalyst.

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Quantum chemistry and time-resolved spectroscopy are applied to rationalize how singlet fission (SF) is affected by systematic chemical modifications introduced into phenazinothiadiazoles (PTD). Substitution of the terminal aromatic ring of TIPS-tetracene by a thiadiazole group leads to a considerable change in the relative energies of its S and T states. Thus, in contrast to TIPS-tetracene, SF becomes exothermic for various PTD derivatives, which show S-2T energy differences as high as 0.

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The previously elusive diphosphadibenzo[ a, e]pentalene core skeleton was assembled via a surprisingly straightforward cyclization pathway starting from RP-substituted 2,2'-diphosphinotolanes (R = Ph, Pr). The resulting P-protected diylidic compounds 4 (R = Ph, Pr) were converted to the corresponding P-bridged ladder stilbenes via two consecutive oxidation steps: upon selective one-electron oxidation, the persistent radical monocations 5 (R = Ph, Pr) were obtained and further oxidized to afford the respective fluorescent and air-stable dications 6 (R = Ph, Pr).

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The ultrafast structural changes during the photoinduced isomerization of the retinal-protonated Schiff base (RPSB) is still a poorly understood aspect in the retinal's photochemistry. In this work, we apply pump-degenerate four-wave mixing (pump-DFWM) to all- trans retinal (ATR) and retinal Schiff bases (RSB) to resolve coherent high- and low-frequency vibrational signatures from excited electronic states. We show that the vibrational spectra of excited singlet states in these samples exhibit pronounced differences compared to the relaxed ground state.

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The light-activated cleavage of cyclobutane-based systems via [2 + 2] cycloreversions, such as thymine and coumarin dimers, is an important but still poorly understood ultrafast photochemical reaction. Systems displaying reversible cycloreversion have found various uses in cross-linked polymers, enhancing gas adsorption affinities in inorganics, and light-activated medical therapies. We report the identification of a heterogeneous mode of cycloreversion for a rarely examined coumarin analogue system.

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Deoxyuridine nucleosides embodied into diarylethenes form an especial class of photoswitchable compounds that are designed to stack and pair with DNA bases. The molecular geometry can be switched between "open" and "closed" isomers by a pericyclic reaction that affects the stability of the surrounding double helix. This potentially enables light-induced control of DNA hybridization at microscopic resolution.

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Mechanisms and optimal experimental conditions in coherent control still intensely stimulate debates. In this work, a phase-only control mechanism in an open quantum system is investigated experimentally and numerically. Several parameterizations for femtosecond pulse shaping (combination of chirp and multipulses) are exploited in transient absorption of a prototype organic molecule to control population and vibrational coherence in ground and excited states.

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We present a versatile approach for mid-infrared spectroscopy through the flexible control of a difference-frequency-generation (DFG) process by femtosecond (fs) pulse shaping and spectral focusing. Based on a broadband sub-10-fs oscillator, the spectral position and spectral resolution can be independently selected within the molecular fingerprint region of more than 2000  cm. A spectral resolution better than 20  cm can be achieved, which depends solely on the pulse shaper configuration.

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Liquid-crystal spatial light modulators (LCM) are a common tool to tailor femtosecond laser pulses. The phase stability of 1 kHz, sub-20 fs visible shaped and unshaped pulses are investigated. Our results show that the spectral phase after the LCM varies from pulse to pulse leading to strong deviations from the predicted pulse shapes.

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The chemical basis for the alteration of the refractive properties of an intraocular lens with a femtosecond laser was investigated. Three different microscope setups have been used for the study: Laser Induced Fluorescence (LIF) microscopy, Raman microscopy and coherent anti-Stokes Raman Scattering (CARS) microscopy. Photo-induced hydrolysis of polymeric material in aqueous media produces two hydrophilic functional groups: acid group and alcohol group.

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Multiplex coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (MCARS) microscopy was carried out to map a solid tumor in mouse brain tissue. The border between normal and tumor tissue was visualized using support vector machines (SVM) as a higher ranking type of data classification. Training data were collected separately in both tissue types, and the image contrast is based on class affiliation of the single spectra.

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Coumarins are a class of UV absorbing compounds which exhibit fast, photoinduced cyclobutane ring formation and cleavage reactions. The photophysics behind such processes hold significant relevance for biomedical and photoresponsive materials research. In order to further understand the underlying dynamics of the cleavage reaction, and develop strategies for increasing the reaction efficiency, UV transient absorption spectroscopy was applied to three unsubstituted, isomeric coumarin dimers: anti-head-to-head (anti-hh), syn-head-to-head (syn-hh) and syn-head-to-tail (syn-ht).

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The ultrafast femtochemistry of carotenoids is governed by the interaction between electronic excited states, which has been explained by the relaxation dynamics within a few hundred femtoseconds from the lowest optically allowed excited state S2 to the optically dark state S1. Extending this picture, some additional dark states (3A(g)(-) and 1B(u)(-)) and their interaction with the S2 state have also been suggested to play a major role in the ultrafast deactivation of carotenoids and their properties. Here, we investigate the interaction between such dark and bright electronic excited states of open chain carotenoids, particularly its dependence on the number of conjugated double bonds (N).

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Controlling chemical reactions by light, i.e., the selective making and breaking of chemical bonds in a desired way with strong-field lasers, is a long-held dream in science.

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A novel approach for spectral focusing using a single-beam coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering setup with a pulse shaper controlling the phase and amplitude is presented. By identifying the frequencies acting as the pump, Stokes, and probe, the high degree of control can be exploited in order to specifically and independently tailor the spectral region to act only as probe to achieve the highest signal intensity. While maintaining the optimal excitation of the vibrational coherence, a signal increase by a factor of six in comparison with usual spectral focusing schemes is readily obtained.

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Photoswitches based on the diarylethene architecture have been attracting considerable attention for the investigation and control of a variety of biological processes. The reversible photoisomerization reaction between their open- and closed-ring forms can be selectively addressed by irradiation with light of two markedly different wavelengths. In this work, the dynamics of the photochromic ring-opening reaction of four novel diarylethene-based photoswitchable deoxyuridine nucleosides is investigated by femtosecond transient absorption.

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The influence of the carbon to nitrogen substitution on the photoinduced dynamics of TIPS-pentacene was investigated by ultrafast transient absorption measurements on spin-coated thin films in the visible and in the near-infrared spectral region. A global target analysis was performed to provide a detailed picture of the excited-state dynamics. We found that the chemical modification has a high impact on the triplet formation and leads to shorter dynamics; hence it speeds up the singlet fission process.

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Femtosecond pump-depletion-probe experiments were carried out in order to shed light on the ultrafast excited-state dynamics of triisopropylsilylethynyl (TIPS)-pentacene and two nitrogen-containing derivatives, namely, diaza-TIPS-pentacene and tetraaza-TIPS-pentacene. Measurements performed in the visible and near-infrared spectral range in combination with rate model simulations reveal that singlet fission proceeds via the extremely short-lived intermediate (1)TT state, which absorbs in the near-infrared spectral region only. The T1 → T3 transition probed in the visible region shows a rise time that comprises two components according to a consecutive reaction (S1 → (1)TT → T1).

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The synthesis of highly efficient two-photon uncaging groups and their potential use in functional conjugated polymers for post-polymerization modification are reported. Careful structural design of the employed nitrophenethyl caging groups allows to efficiently induce bond scission by a two-photon process through a combination of exceptionally high two-photon absorption cross-sections and high reaction quantum yields. Furthermore, π-conjugated polyfluorenes are functionalized with these photocleavable side groups and it is possible to alter their emission properties and solubility behavior by simple light irradiation.

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We demonstrate the use of shaped 10 fs pulses for multimodal microscopy. The combination of a broadband oscillator and a pulse shaper provides a flexible light source that can be optimized for various nonlinear effects produced in the sample, either for signal intensity or for selectivity. While the highest nonlinear generation efficiency is achieved with the shortest pulses, more complex waveforms address specific transitions in the sample for better contrast.

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Multidimensional femtosecond time-resolved vibrational coherence spectroscopy allows one to investigate the evolution of vibrational coherence in electronic excited states. Methods such as pump-degenerate four-wave mixing and pump-impulsive vibrational spectroscopy combine an initial ultrashort laser pulse with a nonlinear probing sequence to reinduce vibrational coherence exclusively in the excited states. By carefully exploiting specific electronic resonances, one can detect vibrational coherence from 0 cm(-1) to over 2,000 cm(-1) and map its evolution.

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In the present work we have explored the ultrafast relaxation network of coumarin and umbelliferone (7-hydroxy-coumarin) using time-resolved femtosecond spectroscopy and quantum chemical calculations. Despite the importance of the photophysical properties of coumarin derivatives for applications in biomedicine, the low fluorescence quantum yield of coumarin itself has not been fully understood so far. On the basis of our combined experimental and theoretical results we suggest a model for the ultrafast decay after photoexcitation incorporating two parallel radiationless relaxation pathways: one within the initially excited state via ring opening and the other one by transition into a dark state along the carbonyl stretching mode.

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