| Literature DB >> 26277816 |
Eric M M Tan1, Michiel Hilbers1, Wybren J Buma1.
Abstract
Sunscreens are aimed at providing protection from solar UV radiation. However, the same mechanism that underlies this protection (absorption of UV radiation) is also responsible for their light-induced adverse effects. Here, high-resolution spectroscopic methods are applied to one of the most commonly used sunscreen chromophores to study the excited-state dynamics that determine the delicate balance between favorable and adverse effects. In contrast to common belief, we find that excitation to the "bright" ππ* state does not directly lead to repopulation of the electronic ground state. Instead, internal conversion to another electronically excited state identified as the "dark" nπ* state is a major decay pathway that impedes fast energy dissipation. Microsolvation studies of sunscreen chromophores with water demonstrate that under such conditions, this bottleneck is no longer present. These observations could be a first step toward the development of sunscreens with improved photochemical properties.Entities:
Keywords: cinnamates; electronic structure; internal conversion; molecular beam spectroscopy
Year: 2014 PMID: 26277816 DOI: 10.1021/jz501140b
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys Chem Lett ISSN: 1948-7185 Impact factor: 6.475