Femtosecond x-ray spectroscopy of an electrocyclic ring-opening reaction

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Abstract

The ultrafast light-activated electrocyclic ring-opening reaction of 1,3-cyclohexadiene is a fundamental prototype of photochemical pericyclic reactions. Generally, these reactions are thought to proceed through an intermediate excited-state minimum (the so-called pericyclic minimum), which leads to isomerization via nonadiabatic relaxation to the ground state of the photoproduct. Here, we used femtosecond (fs) soft x-ray spectroscopy near the carbon K-edge (∼284 electron volts) on a table-top apparatus to directly reveal the valence electronic structure of this transient intermediate state. The core-tovalence spectroscopic signature of the pericyclic minimum observed in the experiment was characterized, in combination with time-dependent density functional theory calculations, to reveal overlap and mixing of the frontier valence orbital energy levels. We show that this transient valence electronic structure arises within 60 ± 20 fs after ultraviolet photoexcitation and decays with a time constant of 110 ± 60 fs.

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Attar, A. R., Bhattacherjee, A., Pemmaraju, C. D., Schnorr, K., Closser, K. D., Prendergast, D., & Leone, S. R. (2017). Femtosecond x-ray spectroscopy of an electrocyclic ring-opening reaction. Science, 356(6333), 54–59. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaj2198

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