Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), Bowling Green State University, 2016, Photochemical Sciences
This work gives the detailed description of the dynamics and mechanism of the previously
unsuspected photochemical reaction path of diiodomethane (CH2I2), a paradigmatic haloalkane,
which is direct intramolecular isomerization upon the excitation of this molecule to the lowest
singlet S1 state. The previous liquid-phase ultrafast spectroscopy experiments on the UV
photochemistry of di- and polyhalomethanes suggest that following excitation of these molecules,
the carbon-halogen bond breaks, leading to formation of the initial radical pair. The radical pair,
trapped by a solvent cage collapses into an isomer product species with halogen-halogen bond on
a picoseconds timescale (1 ps = 10-12 s). Yet, the results recently obtained in our research group,
clearly suggest that in addition to this conventional, in-cage isomerization process, there is another,
unconventional isomerization mechanism, which occurs on a sub-100 fs timescale (1 fs = 10-15 s)
and does not require the solvent environment around the excited CH2I2 solute. Indeed, the ultrafast
sub-100 fs timescale observed suggests two main considerations:
• The sub-100 fs photoisomerization in polyhalomethanes is direct, i.e. proceeds via the
intramolecular reaction mechanism proceeding without any intermediates (such as a radical
pair) and, likely, is mediated by a crossing of excited and ground electronic states.
• The solvent cage may not be needed, because the timescale of the aforementioned
isomerization process is shorter than the 100-200 fs timescale for a single collisional
encounter between solvent and solute molecules.
iii
Femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy is a very valuable tool in studying the
photochemical reactivity on short timescales. The measured ultrafast time-resolved spectra are
complicated by relaxation processes in far from equilibrium solutes, such as intramolecular energy
redistribution and flow, and can be understood in detail with the help from state-of-t (open full item for complete abstract)
Committee: Alexander Tarnovsky Ph.D. (Advisor); Massimo Olivucci Ph.D. (Committee Co-Chair); Robert McKay Ph.D. (Committee Member); John Cable Ph.D. (Committee Member)
Subjects: Chemistry; Physics