Researchers from Korea, Italy, France and the ESRF have just observed how a
molecule changes structure after being hit with a short flash of laser light.
Thanks to very intense pulses of X-rays from the synchrotron and novel data
analysis, they were able to confirm a long standing hypothesis regarding the
evolution of this molecule. The results are published in the 14 July Science
Express, the online counterpart of the journal Science.
The experiment was started by dissolving the molecule C2H4I2 in liquid methanol
and then hitting it with a short laser pulse. This excited the molecule, which
then cooled down while releasing heat into the surrounding liquid. As a consequence,
the temperature rose and the liquid started to expand in response to the increase
in temperature. The absorption of light triggered a chemical reaction, which
the researchers studied with picosecond time resolution. They measured the change
in shape and composition as early as 100 picoseconds after the initial explosion,
then at 10 nanoseconds after, then 1 microsecond and so on. All these dancing
atoms were confined to a tiny “dance floor” with a radius of about 6 Ångstroms
(0.6 nanometres).
Once excited, one of the bonds in the molecule was elongated. The excited molecule
then had two fates. One of them was to bounce back to the hot ground-state C2H4I2,
which is surrounded by solvent molecules. In the second case, the excited molecule
C2H4I2 dissociates and forms C2H4I and I. There are two hypotheses on the structure
of the C2H4I radical. The first possibility is that the radical retains a classical
structure very similar to the initial structure of C2H4I2-(the anti structure).
The second possibility is that the iodine combines with the two carbon molecules
in a triangular geometry (bridge structure). This bridged conformation is the
structure that prevails, according to the new measurements at the ESRF. The bridged
structure has long been hypothesised to explain stereochemical control, but has
never been observed directly until now. This research is the outcome of two-years
of work involving a Korean research group from KAIST lead by Hyotcherl Ihee and
the ID09B team lead by Michael Wulff.
Researchers at the ESRF had already studied the dissociation of molecular iodine
some months ago and defined, theoretically and experimentally, the principal
reaction channels in photo reactions in liquids. This new work is an important
step forward since C2H4I2 is a bigger and more complex molecule and, more importantly,
its photoreaction proceeds though novel molecular structures that have never
been seen before. This research opens a new door to the study of chemical reactions
in liquids. Hyotcherl Ihee, first author of the paper, believes that this technique
will be used increasingly in the future: “We envisage to expand it to study other
samples, such as nanomaterials and proteins”.
URL :
http://www.esrf.fr/NewsAndEvents/PressReleases/PRESSRELEASEID09/
For further information, please contact:
Montserrat Capellas
European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF)
capellas@esrf.fr
+33 476 88 26 63
Posted By:
European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF)
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