Photoinduced molecular chirality probed by ultrafast resonant X-ray spectroscopy

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Abstract

Recently developed circularly polarized X-ray light sources can probe the ultrafast chiral electronic and nuclear dynamics through spatially localized resonant core transitions. We present simulations of time-resolved circular dichroism signals given by the difference of left and right circularly polarized X-ray probe transmission following an excitation by a circularly polarized optical pump with the variable time delay. Application is made to formamide which is achiral in the ground state and assumes two chiral geometries upon optical excitation to the first valence excited state. Probes resonant with various K-edges (C, N, and O) provide different local windows onto the parity breaking geometry change thus revealing the enantiomer asymmetry.

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Rouxel, J. R., Kowalewski, M., & Mukamel, S. (2017). Photoinduced molecular chirality probed by ultrafast resonant X-ray spectroscopy. Structural Dynamics, 4(4). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4974260

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