Probing the birth and ultrafast dynamics of hydrated electrons at the gold/liquid water interface via an optoelectronic approach

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Abstract

The hydrated electron has fundamental and practical significance in radiation and radical chemistry, catalysis, and radiobiology. While its bulk properties have been extensively studied, its behavior at solid/liquid interfaces is still unclear due to the lack of effective tools to characterize this short-lived species in between two condensed matter layers. In this study, we develop a novel optoelectronic technique for the characterization of the birth and structural evolution of solvated electrons at the metal/liquid interface with a femtosecond time resolution. Using this tool, we record for the first time the transient spectra (in a photon energy range from 0.31 to 1.85 eV) in situ with a time resolution of 50 fs revealing several novel aspects of their properties at the interface. Especially the transient species show state-dependent optical transition behaviors from being isotropic in the hot state to perpendicular to the surface in the trapped and solvated states. The technique will enable a better understanding of hot electron driven reactions at electrochemical interfaces.

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Tong, Y., Lapointe, F., Wolf, M., & Kramer Campen, R. (2020). Probing the birth and ultrafast dynamics of hydrated electrons at the gold/liquid water interface via an optoelectronic approach. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 142(43), 18619–18627. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c08289

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