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Shake-down spectroscopy as state- and site-specific probe of ultrafast chemical dynamics

Shake-down spectroscopy as state- and site-specific probe of ultrafast chemical dynamics
Shake-down spectroscopy as state- and site-specific probe of ultrafast chemical dynamics

Tracking the multifarious ultrafast electronic and structural changes occurring in a molecule during a photochemical transformation is a challenging endeavor that benefits from recent experimental and computational progress in time-resolved techniques. Measurements of valence electronic states, which provide a global picture of the bonding structure of the molecule, and core electronic states, which provide insight into the local environment, traditionally require different approaches and are often studied separately. Here, we demonstrate that X-ray pulses from a seeded free-electron laser (FEL) enable the measurement of high-resolution, time-resolved X-ray photoelectron spectra (XPS) that capture weak satellite states resulting from shake-down processes in a valence-excited molecule. This approach effectively combines the advantages of both valence- and core-state investigations. We applied this method to investigate photoexcited CS 2molecules, where the role of internal conversion (IC) and intersystem crossing (ISC) in determining the predissociation dynamics is controversial. We present XPS spectra from photoexcited CS 2, obtained at the FERMI FEL. High-resolution measurements, compared to the corresponding spectra obtained from accurate multireference quantum chemical calculations, reveal that shake-down satellite channels are highly sensitive to both valence electronic and geometric changes. Previous studies of the predissociation dynamics have led to uncertain assignments of the branching between singlet and triplet excited states. We derive a propensity rule that demonstrates the spin-selectivity of the shake-downs. This selectivity allows us to unequivocally assign contributions from the bright and dark singlet excited states, with populations tracked along the predissociation dynamic pathway.

0002-7863
32851-32860
Thompson, Henry James
2656b8de-fb3f-4702-bb49-a60a3f837d1d
Bonanomi, Matteo
752f2009-4d88-4259-a2c5-9d5b74267b24
Pedersen, Jacob
41a268dc-8801-44a9-a4f4-b6a2c51ae9d1
Minns, Russell
85280db4-c5a6-4a4c-82fe-75693c6a6045
et al.
Thompson, Henry James
2656b8de-fb3f-4702-bb49-a60a3f837d1d
Bonanomi, Matteo
752f2009-4d88-4259-a2c5-9d5b74267b24
Pedersen, Jacob
41a268dc-8801-44a9-a4f4-b6a2c51ae9d1
Minns, Russell
85280db4-c5a6-4a4c-82fe-75693c6a6045

Thompson, Henry James, Bonanomi, Matteo and Pedersen, Jacob , et al. (2025) Shake-down spectroscopy as state- and site-specific probe of ultrafast chemical dynamics. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 147 (36), 32851-32860. (doi:10.1021/jacs.5c09162).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Tracking the multifarious ultrafast electronic and structural changes occurring in a molecule during a photochemical transformation is a challenging endeavor that benefits from recent experimental and computational progress in time-resolved techniques. Measurements of valence electronic states, which provide a global picture of the bonding structure of the molecule, and core electronic states, which provide insight into the local environment, traditionally require different approaches and are often studied separately. Here, we demonstrate that X-ray pulses from a seeded free-electron laser (FEL) enable the measurement of high-resolution, time-resolved X-ray photoelectron spectra (XPS) that capture weak satellite states resulting from shake-down processes in a valence-excited molecule. This approach effectively combines the advantages of both valence- and core-state investigations. We applied this method to investigate photoexcited CS 2molecules, where the role of internal conversion (IC) and intersystem crossing (ISC) in determining the predissociation dynamics is controversial. We present XPS spectra from photoexcited CS 2, obtained at the FERMI FEL. High-resolution measurements, compared to the corresponding spectra obtained from accurate multireference quantum chemical calculations, reveal that shake-down satellite channels are highly sensitive to both valence electronic and geometric changes. Previous studies of the predissociation dynamics have led to uncertain assignments of the branching between singlet and triplet excited states. We derive a propensity rule that demonstrates the spin-selectivity of the shake-downs. This selectivity allows us to unequivocally assign contributions from the bright and dark singlet excited states, with populations tracked along the predissociation dynamic pathway.

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Accepted/In Press date: 12 August 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 September 2025
Published date: 10 September 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505663
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505663
ISSN: 0002-7863
PURE UUID: 1e3784e1-5701-41b0-89ad-a7b5cdb77026
ORCID for Russell Minns: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6775-2977

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Date deposited: 15 Oct 2025 17:00
Last modified: 16 Oct 2025 01:44

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Contributors

Author: Henry James Thompson
Author: Matteo Bonanomi
Author: Jacob Pedersen
Author: Russell Minns ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.

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