Abstract
Nitrogen heterocycles are known to be important light-absorbing chromophores in a relatively new class of aerosols, commonly referred to as ‘brown carbon’ (BrC) aerosols. Due to their significant absorption and spectral overlap with the solar actinic flux, these BrC chromophores steer the physical and optical properties of aerosols. To model the local aqueous solvation environment surrounding BrC chromophores, we generated cold molecular complexes with water and a prototypical BrC chromophore, 1-phenylpyrrole (1PhPy), using supersonic jet-cooling and explored their intermolecular interactions using single-conformation spectroscopy. Herein, we utilized resonant two-photon ionization (R2PI) and UV holeburning (UV HB) double-resonance spectroscopies to obtain a molecular-level understanding of water microsolvation’s role in charge transfer upon photoexcitation of 1PhPy. Quantum chemical calculations and one-dimensional discrete variable representation simulations revealed insights into the charge transfer efficacy of 1PhPy with and without single water molecule addition. Taken together, our results indicate that the intermolecular interactions with water guide the geometry of 1PhPy to adopt a more twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT) configuration, thus facilitating charge transfer from the pyrrole donor to the phenyl ring acceptor. Fluorescence measurements with increasing H2O %volume corroborated our gas-phase studies by indicating that a polar water solvation environment stabilizes the TICT configuration of 1PhPy in the excited electronic state, from which emission is observed at lower energy compared to the locally-excited configuration.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
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Electronic Potential Energy Surfaces for 1PhPy and 1PhPy+nH2O, 1D-DVR Simulations of Spectra on Purely Electronic Torsional Potential Energy Surfaces, Example Plots of Calculated Torsional Wavefunctions
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Github for DVR Calculations
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Contains simulation code and potential energy surfaces used.
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