| Literature DB >> 33566045 |
Thomas J A Wolf1, Alexander C Paul2, Sarai D Folkestad2, Rolf H Myhre2, James P Cryan1, Nora Berrah3, Phil H Bucksbaum4, Sonia Coriani5, Giacomo Coslovich6, Raimund Feifel7, Todd J Martinez8, Stefan P Moeller6, Melanie Mucke9, Razib Obaid3, Oksana Plekan10, Richard J Squibb7, Henrik Koch11, Markus Gühr12.
Abstract
We present the first investigation of excited state dynamics by resonant Auger-Meitner spectroscopy (also known as resonant Auger spectroscopy) using the nucleobase thymine as an example. Thymine is photoexcited in the UV and probed with X-ray photon energies at and below the oxygen K-edge. After initial photoexcitation to a ππ* excited state, thymine is known to undergo internal conversion to an nπ* excited state with a strong resonance at the oxygen K-edge, red-shifted from the ground state π* resonances of thymine (see our previous study Wolf, et al., Nat. Commun., 2017, 8, 29). We resolve and compare the Auger-Meitner electron spectra associated both with the excited state and ground state resonances, and distinguish participator and spectator decay contributions. Furthermore, we observe simultaneously with the decay of the nπ* state signatures the appearance of additional resonant Auger-Meitner contributions at photon energies between the nπ* state and the ground state resonances. We assign these contributions to population transfer from the nπ* state to a ππ* triplet state via intersystem crossing on the picosecond timescale based on simulations of the X-ray absorption spectra in the vibrationally hot triplet state. Moreover, we identify signatures from the initially excited ππ* singlet state which we have not observed in our previous study.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33566045 DOI: 10.1039/d0fd00112k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Faraday Discuss ISSN: 1359-6640 Impact factor: 4.008