P. Changenet et al., ULTRAFAST TWISTING DYNAMICS OF PHOTOEXCITED AURAMINE IN SOLUTION, The journal of physical chemistry. A, Molecules, spectroscopy, kinetics, environment, & general theory, 102(34), 1998, pp. 6716-6721
Subpicosecond fluorescence up-conversion and transient absorption spec
troscopy is applied to study the excited-state dynamics of auramine, a
diphenylmethane dye, in liquid solutions. The fluorescence decays, on
a time scale of a few picoseconds to a few tens of picoseconds, are f
ound to be nonexponential and solvent viscosity dependent. They can be
fitted as a sum of two exponentials in ethanol and three exponentials
in decanol with a larger average Lifetime in the more viscous solvent
. The decays exhibit wavelength-dependent time constants, whereas the
fluorescence rise time is instrument limited (150 fs) at all wavelengt
hs. The average decay time increases with the wavelength across the st
eady-state emission spectrum. The spectral reconstruction indicates a
few hundred wavenumbers dynamic Stokes shift accompanied by a drop in
the intensity in both solvents. From transient absorption experiments,
the fluorescent state population is shown to decay to an intermediate
dark state and then to the ground state, with a viscosity-dependent r
ate. A barrierless or quasi-barrierless photoreaction involving the ro
tational diffusion of the phenyl rings, with a change in the radiative
transition rate along the reaction path, is proposed to explain the w
avelength-dependent nonexponential fluorescence decays. Both fluoresce
nce and transient absorption data are discussed in support of an adiab
atic photoreaction involving internal twisting and charge shift.