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Journal ArticleDOI

Resonant intermolecular transfer of vibrational energy in liquid water

TLDR
In this paper, the authors reported time-resolved pump-probe laser spectroscopy measurements that reveal the occurrence of fast resonant intermolecular transfer of OH-stretch excitations over many water molecules before the excitation energy is dissipated.
Abstract
Many biological, chemical and physical processes involve the transfer of energy. In the case of electronic excitations, transfer between molecules is rapid, whereas for vibrations in the condensed phase, resonant energy transfer is an unlikely process because the typical timescale of vibrational relaxation (a few picoseconds) is much shorter than that of resonant intermolecular vibrational energy transfer1,2. For the OH-stretch vibration in liquid water, which is of particular importance due to its coupling to the hydrogen bond, extensive investigations have shown that vibrational relaxation takes place with a time constant of 740 ± 25 femtoseconds (ref. 7). So for resonant intermolecular energy transfer to occur in liquid water, the interaction between the OH-stretch modes of different water molecules needs to be extremely strong. Here we report time-resolved pump-probe laser spectroscopy measurements that reveal the occurrence of fast resonant intermolecular transfer of OH-stretch excitations over many water molecules before the excitation energy is dissipated. We find that the transfer process is mediated by dipole–dipole interactions (the Forster transfer mechanism9) and additional mechanisms that are possibly based on intermolecular anharmonic interactions involving hydrogen bonds. Our findings suggest that liquid water may play an important role in transporting vibrational energy between OH groups located on either different biomolecules or along extended biological structures. OH groups in a hydrophobic environment should accordingly be able to remain in a vibrationally excited state longer than OH groups in a hydrophilic environment.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Negligible Effect of Ions on the Hydrogen-Bond Structure in Liquid Water

TL;DR: This result shows that the presence of ions does not lead to an enhancement or a breakdown of the hydrogen-bond network in liquid water.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multidimensional femtosecond correlation spectroscopies of electronic and vibrational excitations.

TL;DR: A classical-oscillator description of these spectroscopies in terms of interacting quasiparticles (rather than transitions among global eigenstates) sets the stage for designing new pulse sequences and inverting the multidimensional signals to yield molecular structures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dispersive Fourier transformation for fast continuous single-shot measurements

Keisuke Goda, +1 more
- 01 Feb 2013 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors cover the principle of dispersive Fourier transformation and its implementation in diverse applications, such as optical rogue waves and rare cancer cells in blood, as well as their application in real-time instrumentation and measurement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coherent Two-Dimensional Optical Spectroscopy

TL;DR: Although the optical analogs of 2D NMR do not provide an atomic resolution structure of complex molecules, optical domain multi-dimensional spectroscopy has certain advantages because of the dramatic gain in time resolution possible and the ability to directly observe and quantify the couplings between quantum states involved in molecular dynamical processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultrafast memory loss and energy redistribution in the hydrogen bond network of liquid H2O

TL;DR: The results highlight the efficiency of energy redistribution within the hydrogen-bonded network, and that liquid water essentially loses the memory of persistent correlations in its structure within 50 fs.
References
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Book

Water:A Comprehensive Treatise

Felix Franks
Book

Modern quantum chemistry

Attila Szabo
Journal ArticleDOI

Femtosecond Mid-IR Pump-Probe Spectroscopy of Liquid Water: Evidence for a Two-Component Structure

TL;DR: A femtosecond mid-infrared pump-probe study of the vibrational and orientational dynamics of the OH-stretching mode of HDO dissolved in D2O is presented in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

Theory of fluorescence depolarization in macromolecules and membranes

TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive formalism is developed to describe the decay of the fluorescence emission anisotropy r(t) in macroscopically isotropic systems where both excited state and orientational dynamics contribute to the depolarization.
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