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In this work, two techniques, based on the established method of pump--probe spectroscopy were used to investigate the properties of molecular systems in the liquid phase within the visible spectral wavelength range.
The first technique is standard transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy which was applied to a diazo-precursor to identify the formation of a biradical in an inert solvent after UV excitation. With the combination of EPR spectroscopy and quantum chemical calculations, the formation of a biradical in an unpolar and non-protic solvent was proven. Besides, in the presence of air or a polar and protic solvent, the biradical reacts ultrafast to various side products.
The second technique is time-resolved circular dichroism (TRCD) spectroscopy, which was performed in two different ways. The first approach based on a pulse-enantiomer (PE) setup, where an initially circularly polarized pulse was split into two pulses, of which one was mirrored under normal incidence, to flip its polarization. The result was two pulses with mirrored polarization states that propagate collinearly to the sample as left and right circularly polarized probe pulses. The alignment procedure as well as the drawbacks of this setup are described in detail.
However, a new TRCD setup was built that used a polarization grating to get left and right circularly polarized pulses. With the experiences of working with the PE setup, the new TRCD setup could be optimized so that TRCD spectra of a chiral squaraine polymer could be measured. With the help of quantum chemical calculations, the signals were assigned to exciton dynamics that describe spatial and energetic rearrangements of the excitation energy. The alignment and the measurement procedures to perform TRCD spectroscopy with the new setup are described in detail for future experiments.
The goal of this thesis was the development and application of higher-order spectroscopic techniques. In contrast to ordinary pump–probe (PP) and two-dimensional (2D) spectroscopy, higher-order coherently detected spectroscopic methods measure a polarization that has an order of nonlinearity higher than three. The key idea of the techniques in this thesis is to isolate the higher-order signals from the lower-order signals either by their excitation frequency or by their excitation intensity dependence. Due to the increased number of interactions in higher-order spectroscopy, highly excited states can be probed. For excitonic systems such as aggregates and polymers, the fifth-order signal allows one to directly measure exciton–exciton annihilation (EEA). In polymers and aggregates, the exciton transport is not connected to a change of the absorption and can therefore not be investigated with conventional third-order techniques. In contrast, EEA can be used as a probe to study exciton diffusion in these isonergetic systems. As a part of this thesis, anisotropy in fifth-order 2D spectroscopy was investigated and was used to study geometric properties in polymers.
In 2D spectroscopy, the multi-quantum signals are separated from each other by their spectral position along the excitation axis. This concept can be extended systematically to higher signals. Another approach to isolate multi-quantum signals in PP spectroscopy utilizes the excitation intensity. The PP signal is measured at specific excitation intensities and linear combinations of these measurements result in different signal contributions. However, these signals do not correspond to clean nonlinear signals because the higher-order signals contaminate the lower-order multi-quantum signals. In this thesis, a correction protocol was derived that uses the isolated multiquantum signals, both from 2D spectroscopy and from PP spectroscopy, to remove the contamination of higher-order signals resulting in clean nonlinear signals. Using the correction on the third-order signal allows one to obtain annihilation-free signals at high excitation intensities, i.e., with high signal-to-noise ratio. Isolation and correction in PP and 2D spectroscopy were directly compared by measuring the clean third-order signals of squaraine oligomers at high excitation intensities. Furthermore, higher-order PP spectroscopy was used to isolate up to the 13th nonlinear order of squaraine polymers.
The demonstrated spectroscopic techniques represent general procedures to isolate clean signals in terms of perturbation theory. The technique of higher-order PP spectroscopy needs only small modifications of ordinary PP setups which opens the field of higher-order spectroscopy to the broad scientific community. The technique to obtain clean nonlinear signals allows one to systematically increase the number of interacting (quasi)particles in a system and to characterize their interaction energies and dynamics.
This thesis describes novel concepts for the measurement of the static and dynamic properties of the electronic structure of molecules and nanocrystals in the liquid phase by means of coherent fluorescence-detected spectroscopy in two and three frequency dimensions. These concepts are based on the systematic variation ("phase cycling") of a sequence of multiple time-delayed femtosecond excitation pulses in order to decode a multitude of novel nonlinear signals from the resulting phase-dependent fluorescence signal. These signals represent any permutation of correlations between zero-, one-, two-, and three-quantum coherences. To this end, two new phase-cycling schemes have been developed which can simultaneously resolve and discriminate several nonlinear signals of sixth order, including those of the fourth order of nonlinearity.
By means of the sixth-order signals recorded in this work, static properties of highly excited electronic states in molecules such as their energies, transition dipole moments, and relative displacement of electronic potential surfaces, as well as dynamic properties in terms of their relaxation kinetics, can be ascertained. Furthermore, it was shown that these signals are suitable for the characterization of exciton-exciton correlations in colloidal quantum dots and for the measurement of ultrafast exciton-exciton annihilation in molecular aggregates.
The experiments performed in this thesis mark an important step towards the complete characterization of the nonlinear response of quantum systems. In view of this, the concept of fluorescence-detected multiple-quantum coherence multidimensional spectroscopy introduced here offers a unified, systematic approach.
In virtue of the technical advantages such as the use of a single excitation beam and the absence of nonresonant contributions, the measurement protocols developed here can be directly transferred to other incoherent observables and to sample systems in other states of matter. Furthermore, the approaches presented here can be systematically extended to higher frequency dimensions and higher orders of nonlinearity.
Nanoröhren, die auf dem Element Kohlenstoff basieren, besitzen ein großes Potential für ihre
Anwendung als neuartige und nachhaltige Materialien im Bereich der Optoelektronik und weiteren
zukunftsweisenden Technologiefeldern. Um jedoch hierfür genutzt werden zu können, ist
ein tiefgreifendes Kenntnis über ihre außergewöhnlichen photophysikalischen Eigenschaften notwendig.
Kohlenstoffnanoröhren sind als eindimensionale Halbleiter sehr vielseitige Materialien.
Jedoch ist der Zusammenhang zwischen ihrer Eignung als Halbleiter und der dafür notwendigen
Dotierung nur sehr unzureichend verstanden.
Die Ziele der vorliegenden Dissertation waren deshalb, ein grundlegendes Verständnis der photophysikalischen
Energietransferprozesse in Nanoröhren zu erlangen und den Einfluss von gezielten
Dotierungen auf diese Prozesse im Hinblick auf ihre Eigenschaften als eindimensionale Halbleiter
detailliert zu untersuchen. Die Grundlage für die Experimente bildeten verschiedene Filme
aus einwandigen (6,5)-Kohlenstoffnanoröhren, die durch ein Polyfluoren-Copolymer in einer
organischen Lösungsmittelumgebung isoliert wurden. Mit Hilfe der Ultrakurzzeitspektroskopie
wurden die auf einer schnellen (ps-ns) Zeitskala ablaufenden photophysikalischen Prozesse an
diesen Filmen unter verschiedenen Bedingungen untersucht und analysiert.
In Kapitel 4 wurde der generelle Energietransfer der Kohlenstoffnanoröhren in Polymermatrizen
im Detail studiert. Hierbei wurden durch Simulationen theoretische dreidimensionale
Verteilungen von Kohlenstoffnanoröhren erzeugt und die nach einem Energietransfer vorliegenden
Polarisationsanisotropien berechnet. Verschiedene Berechnungsansätze ergaben, dass die
Nanorohrdichte ϱSWCNT für ein Massenüberschuss X der Matrix nahezu unabhängig von dem
Röhrenvolumen war und durch ϱSWCNT = X−1 · 40 000 μm−1 angenähert werden konnte. Die
Simulationen lieferten von der Röhrendichte abhängige Gaußverteilungen der zwischen den
Nanoröhren vorliegenden Abständen. Aus den Verteilungen konnte weiterhin der Anteil an Röhren
bestimmt werden, die für einen Energietransfer zur Verfügung stehen. Weitere Simulationen
von Nanorohrverteilungen lieferten die Polarisationsanisotropie in Abhängigkeit von der Anzahl
an durchgeführten Energietransferschritten. Die Ergebnisse aus den Simulationen wurden zur
Interpretation der Ultrakurzzeitmessungen angewandt. Hierbei wurden durch die Variation der
Polymermatrix die zwischen den Nanoröhren vorliegenden Abstände verändert und damit die
Art und Intensität des Energietransfers kontrolliert. In Messungen der transienten Anisotropie
zeigte sich, dass ein Exziton nach seiner Erzeugung zwei depolarisierende Energietransferschritte
durchführte. Die Zerfallsdynamiken des Exzitons gaben auch klare Hinweise auf weitere nicht
depolarisierende Energietransferprozesse, die durch parallel zueinander stehende Übergangsdipolmomente
ermöglicht wurden. Eine Erklärung für dieses Verhalten lieferte die faserige
Struktur der Filme, die sich in Aufnahmen durch das Elektronenmikroskop zeigte.
Das Kapitel 5 beschäftigte sich mit dem Aufbau eines transienten Nahinfrarotspektrometers
und den nötigen experimentellen Umbauten zur Messung der transienten Absorption für energiearme
Signale im Spektralbereich unterhalb von 1.4 eV. Hierzu wurde die Weißlichterzeugung
für die Verwendung von Calciumfluorid umgebaut. Das erzeugte Weißlicht wurde in das aufgebaute
Prismenspektrometer eingekoppelt, um es weitestgehend linear auf einer Energieskala zu dispergieren. Auf diese Weise wurden energiearme Spektralkomponenten nicht auf unverhältnismäßig
viele Pixel verteilt und konnten mit ausreichender Intensität detektiert werden. Die
Lichtdetektion erfolgte mittels zweier Detektorzeilen aus Indiumgalliumarsenid, die das transiente
Signal durch eine direkte Referenzierung stabilisierten. Weiterhin wurde in diesem Kapitel die
Justage und die programmierte Ansteuerung des Systems detailliert beschrieben. Hierbei wurde
auf die Justage der Einkopplung per Freistrahl, die Kalibrierung mittels Bandpassspektren
sowie auf die Aufnahme von Weißlichtspektren und transienten Karten detailliert eingegangen.
An Nanorohrdispersionen durchgeführten Testmessungen zeigten, dass das transiente Nahinfrarotspektrometer
mit direkter Signalreferenzierung einwandfrei funktionierte und daher den
beobachtbaren Spektralbereich auf den Bereich von Energien bis unterhalb von 1 eV erweiterte.
Damit ermöglichte der Aufbau einen Zugang zu der Beobachtung größerer Nanorohrchiralitäten
sowie zu der Untersuchung von energiearmen, spektralen Signaturen von Nanorohrdefekten.
In Kapitel 6 wurde das transiente Nahinfrarotspektrometer genutzt, um das zeitabhängige
Verhalten von redoxchemisch p-dotierten Nanoröhren zu charakterisieren und quantitativ zu
beschreiben. Hierzu wurden die spektralen Eigenschaften von SWCNT-Dünnfilmen als Funktion
eines steigenden Dotierungsgrades durch die Messungen der transienten und linearen Absorption
studiert. In der linearen Absorption im Bereich von 0.9 - 2.5 eV vereinfachte sich das Spektrum
mit ansteigender Dotierung stark und verlor vor allem im Bereich des ersten Subbandes
deutlich an Oszillatorstärke. Bei starker Dotierung verschwanden die Signalbeiträge von X1
und der Phononenseitenbande. Weiterhin bleichte auch die bei mittleren Dotierungsgraden
auftauchende Trionenabsorption aus und ging in die breite Absorptionsbande der H-Bande über.
Das Erscheinen und Verschwinden der trionischen sowie exzitonischen Absorption war ebenfalls
in der transienten Absorption durch zeitgleich auftretende/verschwindende Photobleichsignale
zu erkennen. Sowohl der Zerfall des exzitonischen PB-Signals wie auch des Trions beschleunigte
sich mit einer steigenden Dotierung. Die Zerfallszeit des Exzitons im undotierten Film betrug
6.87 ps und verkürzte sich auf 0.732 ps bei höheren Dotierungsgraden. Die Zerfallszeit des Photobleichens
des Trions reduzierte sich von 2.02 ps auf 0.440 ps. Auffallend war hierbei, dass das
Trion im Vergleich zu dem Exziton exponentiell zerfiel und damit auf eine Lokalisierung dieses
Zustandes hinweist. Bei höheren Dotierungsmittelkonzentrationen tauchte in der transienten
Absorption ein neuer Signalbeitrag auf. Die Existenz dieses Signals konnte auf die H-Bande
zurückgeführt werden und könnte auf einer Verschiebung des linearen Absorptionsspektrums
aufgrund einer Renormalisierung der Bandlücke oder der Sättigung von Ladungsträgern beruhen.
Das Signal zeigte eine klare Abhängigkeit vom Dotierungsgrad des Nanorohrfilmes. So wies es
eine hypsochrome Verschiebung auf, wurde spektral breiter und seine Zerfallsdauer reduzierte
sich von 1.62 ps auf 0.520 ps mit steigendem Dotierungsgrad.
Um den jahrtausendealten Weg der Menschheit vom Papyrus über Buchdruck und siliziumbasierte Halbleiter in Richtung noch leistungsfähigerer Technologien zu gehen und weiterhin Heureka-Momente zu schaffen, bieten Kohlenstoffnanoröhren ein weites Forschungsfeld. Besonders die halbleitenden Charakteristika von SWNTs sowie die Manipulation dieser durch Dotierung bergen viele Möglichkeiten für zukünftige Anwendungen in moderner Elektrotechnologie. Der Weg zu einer industriellen Implementierung von SWNTs in neuartigen optoelektronischen Bauteilen ließe sich durch eine Ausweitung des Wissens bezüglich SWNTs und der dotierungsbasierten Anpassung ihrer Eigenschaften ebnen.
Mit dieser Erkenntniserweiterung als Zielsetzung wurden im Rahmen dieser Dissertation halbleitende, einwandige (6,5)-Kohlenstoffnanoröhren als chiralitätsreine, polymerstabilisierte Proben untersucht. Die ultrakurzzeitaufgelöste Spektroskopie der SWNTs erfolgte an organischen Suspensionen wie auch Dünnschichtfilmen, die je mittels eines gewissen Quantums an Gold(III)-chlorid dotiert worden waren. So konnten die ablaufenden Dynamiken auf einer ps-Zeitskala untersucht werden.
In Kapitel 4 konnte mittels transienter Absorptionsexperimente an redoxchemisch p-dotierter SWNT-Suspensionen zunächst gezeigt werden, dass sich die bei optischer Anregung gebildeten Trionen nicht analog zu Exzitonen diffusiv entlang der Nanoröhre bewegen, sondern lokalisiert vorliegen. Die längere trionischen Zerfallsdauer nach X$_1$- verglichen mit X$_1^+$-resonanter Anregung zeugt außerdem davon, dass das Trion aus dem Exziton gespeist wird. Der Einfluss der Dotierung auf die Zerfallsdynamiken von X$_1$ und X$_1^+$ wurde an SWNT-Dünnschichtfilmen untersucht. Das Photobleichsignal des Exzitons verschiebt hypsochrom und zerfällt schneller mit zunehmender Ladungsträgerdichte durch höherer Gold(III)-chloridkonzentrationen. Dies resultiert aus dem verringerten Abstand zwischen den Ladungsträgern, welche als nichtstrahlende Löschstellen fungieren. Für das X$_1^+$-PB ist ein ähnliches Verhalten zu beobachten. Dabei wird dieses Signal mit weiter steigender Dotierung von einer der H-Bande zuzuordnenden Photoabsorption überlagert. Diese lässt sich in einer starken Sättigung der Dotierung wie auch einer hohen Bandkantenverschiebung begründen.
In Kapitel 5 wurde die Größe der Exzitonen und Trionen in dotierten SWNT-Dünnschichtfilmen mittels des Phasenraumfüllmodells bestimmt. Dabei lag besonderes Augenmerk auf der Kompensation des PB/PA-Überlapps, dem schnellen Zerfall, einem Ausgleich von Differenzen zwischen Anrege- und Absorptionsspektrum sowie dem Anteil intrinsischer/dotierter Nanorohrsegmente, um korrigierte Größen $\xi_\mathrm{k}$ zu erhalten. Für die Trionengröße wurde zusätzlich der Überlapp der Absorptionsbanden einbezogen, um korrigierte Werte $\xi_{\mathrm{T,k}}$ zu bestimmen. $\xi_\mathrm{k}$ beträgt in der intrinsischen Form 6$\pm$2\,nm und bleibt bis zu einer Ladungsträgerdichte $n_{\mathrm{LT}}<0.10$\,nm$^{-1}$ etwa gleich, anschließend ist ein Absinken bis auf etwa 4\,nm bei $n_{\mathrm{LT}}\approx0.20$\,nm$^{-1}$ zu beobachten. Für diesen Trend ist die Überlagerung von Exziton- und H-Bande verantwortlich, da so der Faktor zur Bestimmung des Anteils intrinsischer Nanorohrsegmente an der SWNT verfälscht wird. Die Abweichung der intrinsischen Größe von den in der Literatur berichteten 13$\pm$3\,nm ist möglicherweise auf Unterschiede in der Probenpräparation zurückzuführen. Für die Trionengröße ergibt sich bei steigender Dotierung ein ähnliches Verhalten: Sie beträgt für $n_{\mathrm{LT}}<0.20$\,nm$^{-1}$ 1.83$\pm$0.47\,nm, was in der Größenordnung in guter Übereinstimmung mit der Literatur ist. Für höhere Dotierungen sinkt $\xi_{\mathrm{T,k}}$ bis auf 0.92$\pm$0.26nm ab. Dies erklärt sich dadurch, dass bei höherer $n_{\mathrm{LT}}$ die H-Bande das Spektrum dominiert, sodass der Einfluss der Absorptionsbandenüberlagerung nicht mehr vollständig durch den entsprechenden Korrekturfaktor kompensiert werden kann.
Kapitel 6 beschäftigte sich anstelle redoxchemischer Dotierung der nanoskaligen Halbleiter mit der (spektro-)elektrochemischen Untersuchung von Vorläufern molekularer Radikale. SWV-Messungen weisen dabei darauf hin, dass die Pyrene Pyr1-Pyr3 entsprechend der Anzahl ihrer Substituenten bei Reduktion Mono-, Bi- beziehungsweise Tetraradikale bilden. Die strukturelle Ähnlichkeit der Moleküle äußert sich in gleichen Reduktionspotentialen wie auch ähnlichen potentialabhängigen Absorptionsspektren. Während nur marginale Unterschiede in den PL-Spektren der neutralen und reduzierten Spezies festgestellt werden konnte, lieferte das zeitkorrelierte Einzelphotonenzählen aufschlussreichere Ergebnisse: So wird die Fluoreszenzlebensdauer stark von der Polarität der Umgegbung beeinflusst - bereits die Zugabe des Leitsalzes führt hier zu Änderungen. Die durchschnittliche Fluoreszenzlebensdauer $\tau_{\mathrm{av}}$ sinkt außerdem mit Reduktion und Radikalbildung; für höhere Emissionswellenlängen ist $\tau_{\mathrm{av}}$ außerdem höher. Insgesamt verdeutlichten die Experimente die gute Abschirmung zwischen Pyrenkern und Naphthalimidsubstituenten der Moleküle sowie die Sensibilität gegenüber dem Medium durch TICT, das Vorhandensein von Bi- und Tetraradikalen kann allerdings nicht vollständig belegt werden, wofür EPR-Messugen notwendig wären.
An experimental setup for probing ultrafast dynamics at the diffraction limit was developed, characterized and demonstrated in the scope of the thesis, aiming for optical investigations while simultaneously approaching the physical limits on the length and timescale.
An overview of this experimental setup was given in Chapter 2, as well as the considerations that led to the selection of the individual components. Broadband laser pulses with a length of 9.3 fs, close to the transform limit of 7.6 fs, were focused in a NA = 1.4 immersion oil objective, to the diffraction limit of below 300 nm (FWHM).
The spatial focus shape was characterized with off-resonance gold nanorod scatterers scanned through the focal volume. For further insights into the functionality and limitations of the pulse shaper, its calibration procedure was reviewed. The deviations between designed and experimental pulse shapes were attributed to pulse-shaper artifacts, including voltage-dependent inter-layer as well as intra-layer LCD-pixel crosstalk, Fabry-Pérot-type reflections in the LCD layers, and space-time coupling. A pixel-dependent correction was experimentally carried out, which can be seen as an extension of the initial calibration to all possible voltage combinations of the two LCD layers.
The capabilities of the experimental setup were demonstrated in two types of experiments, targeting the nonlinearity of gold (Chapter 3) as well as two-dimensional spectroscopy at micro-structured surfaces (Chapter 4).
Investigating thin films, an upper bound for the absolute value for the imaginary part of the nonlinear refractive index of gold could be set to |n′′ 2 (Au)| < 0.6·10−16 m2/W, together with |n′ 2 (Au)| < 1.2·10−16 m2/W as an upper bound for the absolute value of the real part. Finite-difference time-domain simulations on y-shaped gold nanostructures indicated that a phase change of ∆Φ ≥ 0.07 rad between two plasmonic modes would induce a sufficient change in the spatial contrast of emission to the far-field to be visible in the experiment. As the latter could not be observed, this value of ∆Φ was determined as the upper bound for the experimentally induced phase change. An upper bound of 52 GW/cm2 was found for the damage threshold.
In Chapter 4, a novel method for nonlinear spectroscopy on surfaces was presented. Termed coherent two-dimensional fluorescence micro-spectroscopy, it is capable of exploring ultrafast dynamics in nanostructures and molecular systems at the diffraction limit. Two-dimensional spectra of spatially isolated hotspots in structured thin films of fluorinated zinc phthalocyanine (F16ZnPc) dye were taken with a 27-step phase-cycling scheme. Observed artifacts in the 2D maps were identified as a consequence from deviations between the desired and the experimental pulse shapes. The optimization procedures described in Chapter 2 successfully suppressed the deviations to a level where the separation from the nonlinear sample response was feasible.
The experimental setup and methods developed and presented in the scope of this thesis demonstrate its flexibility and capability to study microscopic systems on surfaces. The systems exemplarily shown are consisting of metal-organic dyes and metallic nanostructures, represent samples currently under research in the growing fields of organic semiconductors and plasmonics.
Coherent Multidimensional Spectroscopy in Molecular Beams and Liquids Using Incoherent Observables
(2018)
The aim of the present work was to implement an experimental approach that enables coherent two-dimensional (2D) electronic spectroscopy of samples in various states of matter. For samples in the liquid phase, a setup was realized that utilizes the sample fluorescence for the acquisition of 2D spectra. Whereas the liquid-phase approach has been established before, coherent 2D spectroscopy on gaseous samples in a molecular beam as developed in this work is in fact a new method. It employs for the first time cations in a time-of-flight mass spectrometer for signal detection and was used to obtain the first ion-selective 2D spectra of a molecular-beam sample. Additionally, a new acquisition concept was developed in this thesis that significantly decreases measurement times in 2D spectroscopy using optimized sparse sampling and a compressed-sensing reconstruction algorithm.
Characteristic for the variant of 2D spectroscopy presented in this work is the usage of a phase-coherent sequence of four laser pulses in a fully collinear geometry for sample excitation. The pulse sequence was generated by a custom-designed pulse shaper that is capable of rapid scanning by changing the pulse parameters such as time delays and phases with the repetition rate of the laser. The sample's response was detected by monitoring incoherent observables that arise from the final-state population, for instance fluorescence or cations. Phase cycling, i.e., signal acquisition with different combinations of the relative phases of the excitation pulses, was applied to extract nonlinear signal contributions from the full signal during data analysis.
Liquid-phase 2D fluorescence spectroscopy was established with the laser dye cresyl violet as a sample molecule, confirming coherent oscillations previously observed in literature that are originating from vibronic coherences in specific regions of the 2D spectrum.
The data set of this experiment was used subsequently to introduce optimized sparse sampling in 2D spectroscopy. An optimization algorithm was implemented in order to find the best sampling pattern while taking only one quarter of the regular time-domain sampling points, thereby reducing the acquisition time by a factor of four. Signal recovery was based on a new and compact representation of 2D spectra using the von Neumann basis, which required about six times less coefficients than the Fourier basis to retain the relevant information. Successful reconstruction was shown by recovering the coherent oscillations in cresyl violet from a reduced data set.
Finally, molecular-beam coherent 2D spectroscopy was introduced with an investigation of ionization pathways in highly-excited nitrogen dioxide, revealing transitions to discrete auto-ionizing states as the dominant contribution to the ion signal. Furthermore, the advantage of the time-of-flight approach to obtain reactant and product 2D spectra simultaneously enabled the observation of distinct differences in the multiphoton-ionization response functions of the nitrogen dioxide cation and the nitrogen oxide ionic fragment.
The developed experimental techniques of this work will facilitate fast acquisition of 2D spectra for samples in various states of matter and permit reliable direct comparison of results. Therefore, they pave the way to study the properties of quantum coherences during photophysical processes or photochemical reactions in different environments.
The invention of laser pulse shapers allowed for various quantum control experiments, where a chemical reaction is guided by specifically tailored laser pulses. However, despite of the prominent role of the liquid phase in chemistry, no successful attempt for controlling the selectivity of a bond-fission reaction has yet been reported in this state of matter. Promising candidates for such an experiment are C$_{\infty\mathrm{v}}$-symmetric trihalide anions with two different chemical bonds like $\ce{I2Cl-}$, because these molecules notionally offer the most simplest selectivity-control scenario of breaking either the one or the other bond and they are expected to dissociate under ultraviolet (UV) irradiation like it is known for the most-studied trihalide $\ce{I3-}$.
In order to investigate in this thesis the possibility that the dissociation reaction of such trihalides branches into two different photofragments, the ultrafast photodissociation dynamics of $\ce{I3-}$, $\ce{Br3-}$, $\ce{IBr2-}$ and $\ce{ICl2-}$ (point group D$_{\infty\mathrm{h}}$) as well as of $\ce{I2Br-}$ and $\ce{I2Cl-}$ (point group C$_{\infty\mathrm{v}}$) in dichloromethane solution were measured with broadband transient absorption spectroscopy in magic-angle configuration. The identification of the reaction pathway(s) relies on vibrational wavepacket oscillations, which survive the dissociation process and therefore carry not only informations about the reactant trihalides but also about the fragment dihalides.
These characteristic vibrational wavenumbers were extracted from the measured transient absorption spectra by globally fitting the population dynamics together with the wavepacket dynamics. Until recently, such a combined model function was not available in the well-established fitting tool Glotaran. This made it inevitable to develop a custom implementation of the underlying variable-projection fitting algorithm, for which the computer-algebra software Mathematica was chosen. Mathematica's sophisticated built-in functions allow not only for a high flexibility in constructing arbitrary model functions, but also offer the possibility to automatically calculate the derivative(s) of a model function. This allows the fitting procedure to use the exact Jacobian matrix instead of approximating it with the finite difference method.
Against the expectation, only one of the two thinkable photodissociation channels was found for each of the investigated C$_{\infty\mathrm{v}}$ trihalides. Since the photofragments recombine, their absorption signal as well as the reactant ground state bleach recover. This happens in a biexponential manner, which in the case of $\ce{I3-}$ was interpreted by Ruhman and coworkers with the direct formation of a neutral dihalogen fragment $\ce{I2}$ beside the negatively charged dihalide fragment $\ce{I2-}$. In this thesis, such a direct reaction channel was not found and instead the fast component of the biexponential decay is explained with vibrational excess energy mediating the recombination-preceding electron transfer process $\ce{I2- + I -> I2 + I-}$, while the slow component is attributed to cooled-down fragments.
In addition to the trihalide experiments, the possibility of a magic-angle configuration for polarization-shaping control experiments was theoretically investigated in this thesis by deriving magic-angle conditions for the third-order electric-dipole response signal of arbitrarily polarized laser pulses. Furthermore, the subtleties of anisotropy signals violating the well-known range of \numrange{-0.2}{0.4} were studied.
Investigation of Nanostructure-Induced Localized Light Phenomena Using Ultrafast Laser Spectroscopy
(2017)
In recent years, the interaction of light with subwavelength structures, i.e., structures that are smaller than the optical wavelength, became more and more interesting to scientific research, since it provides the opportunity to manipulate light-induced dynamics below the optical diffraction limit. Specifically designed nanomaterials can be utilized to tailor the temporal evolution of electromagnetic fields at the nanoscale. For the investigation of strongly localized processes, it is essential to resolve both their spatial and their temporal behavior. The aim of this thesis was to study and/or control the temporal evolution of three nanostructure-induced localized light phenomena by using ultrafast laser spectroscopy with high spatial resolution.
In Chapter 4, the absorption of near-infrared light in thin-film a-Si:H solar cells was investigated. Using nanotextured instead of smooth interfaces for such devices leads to an increase of absorption from < 20% to more than 50% in the near-infrared regime. Time-resolved experiments with femtosecond laser pulses were performed to clarify the reason for this enhancement. The coherent backscattered radiation from nanotextured solar cell devices was measured as a function of the sample position and evaluated via spectral interferometry. Spatially varying resonance peaks in the recorded spectra indicated the formation of localized photonic modes within the nanotextured absorber layers. In order to identify the modes separately from each other, coherent two-dimensional (2D) nanoscopy was utilized, providing a high spatial resolution < 40 nm. In a nanoscopy measurement on a modified device with an exposed nanotextured a-Si:H absorber layer, hot-spot electron emission was observed and confirmed the presence of localized modes. Fitting the local 2D nanospectra at the hot-spot positions enabled the determination of the resonance frequencies and coherence lifetimes of the modes. The obtained lifetime values varied between 50 fs and 130 fs. Using a thermionic emission model allowed the calculation of the locally absorbed energy density and, with this, an estimation of the localization length of the photonic modes (≈1 μm). The localization could be classified by means of the estimated localization length and additional data evaluation of the backscattered spectra as strong localization ─ the so-called Anderson localization.
Based on the experimental results, it was concluded that the enhanced absorption of near-infrared light in thin-film silicon solar cells with nanotextured interfaces is caused by the formation of strongly localized photonic modes within the disordered absorber layers. The incoming near-infrared light is trapped in these long-living modes until absorption occurs.
In Chapter 5, a novel hybridized plasmonic device was introduced and investigated in both theory and experiment. It consists of two widely separated whispering gallery mode (WGM) nanoantennas located in an elliptical plasmonic cavity. The goal was to realize a periodic long-range energy transfer between the nanoantennas. In finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) simulations, the device was first optimized with respect to strong coupling between the localized antenna modes and the spatially-extended cavity mode. The geometrical parameters of the antennas and the cavity were adjusted separately so that the m="0" antenna mode and the cavity mode were resonant at λ="800 nm" . A high spatial overlap of the modes was achieved by positioning the two antennas in the focal spots of the cavity, leading to a distance between the antenna centers of more than twice the resonant wavelength of the modes. The spectral response of the optimized device revealed an energy splitting of the antenna and the cavity mode into three separated hybridized eigenmodes within an energy range of about 90 meV due to strong coupling. It could be well reproduced by a simple model of three coupled Lorentzian oscillators. In the time domain, an oscillatory energy transfer between both antennas with a period of 86 fs and an energy transfer efficiency of about 7% was observed for single-pulse excitation. For the experiments, devices with cavities and antennas of varying size were fabricated by means of focused-ion-beam (FIB) milling. Time-resolved correlation measurements were performed with high spatial and temporal resolution by using sequences of two femtosecond laser pulses for excitation and photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM) for detection. Local correlation traces at antennas in resonant devices, i.e., devices with enhanced electron emission at both antenna positions, were investigated and reconstructed by means of the coupled-oscillator model. The corresponding spectral response revealed separated peaks, confirming the formation of hybridized eigenmodes due to strong coupling. In a subsequent simulation for single-pulse excitation, one back-and-forth energy transfer between both antennas with an energy transfer efficiency of about 10% was observed.
Based on the theoretical and experimental results, it was demonstrated that in the presented plasmonic device a periodic long-range energy transfer between the two nanoantennas is possible. Furthermore, the coupled-oscillator model enables one to study in depth how specific device properties impact the temporal electric-field dynamics within the device. This can be exploited to further optimize energy transfer efficiency of the device. Future applications are envisioned in ultrafast plasmonic nanocircuitry. Moreover, the presented device can be employed to realize efficient SPP-mediated strong coupling between widely separated quantum emitters.
In Chapter 6, it was investigated in theory how the local optical chirality enhancement in the near field of plasmonic nanostructures can be optimized by tuning the far-field polarization of the incident light. An analytic expression was derived that enables the calculation of the optimal far-field polarizations, i.e., the two far-field polarizations which lead to the highest positive and negative local optical chirality, for any given nanostructure geometry. The two optimal far-field polarizations depend on the local optical response of the respective nanostructure and thus are functions of both the frequency ω and the position r. Their ellipticities differ only in their sign, i.e., in their direction of rotation in the time domain, and the angle between their orientations, i.e., the angle between the principal axes of their ellipses, is ±π/"2" . The handedness of optimal local optical chirality can be switched by switching between the optimal far-field polarizations. In numerical simulations, it was exemplarily shown for two specific nanostructure assemblies that the optimal local optical chirality can significantly exceed the optical chirality values of circularly polarized light in free space ─ the highest possible values in free space. The corresponding optimal far-field polarizations were different from linear and circular and varied with frequency. Using femtosecond polarization pulse shaping provides the opportunity to coherently control local optical chirality over a continuous frequency range. Furthermore, symmetry properties of nanostructures can be exploited to determine which far-field polarization is optimal.
The theoretical findings can have impact on future experimental studies about local optical chirality enhancement. Tuning the far-field polarization of the incident light offers a promising tool to enhance chirally specific interactions of local electromagnetic fields with molecular and other quantum systems in the vicinity of plasmonic nanostructures. The presented approach can be utilized for applications in chiral sensing of adsorbed molecules, time-resolved chirality-sensitive spectroscopy, and chiral quantum control.
In conclusion, each of the localized light phenomena that were investigated in this thesis ─ the enhanced local absorption of near-infrared light due to the formation of localized photonic modes, the periodic long-range energy transfer between two nanoantennas within an elliptical plasmonic cavity, and the optimization of local optical chirality enhancement by tuning the far-field polarization of the incident light ─ can open up new perspectives for a variety of future applications.
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Time-resolved spectroscopy allows for analyzing light-induced energy conversion and
chromophore–chromophore interactions in molecular systems, which is a prerequisite in
the design of new materials and for improving the efficiency of opto-electronic devices.
To elucidate photo-induced dynamics of complex molecular systems, transient absorption
(TA) and coherent two-dimensional (2D) spectroscopy were employed and combined
with additional experimental techniques, theoretical approaches, and simulation models
in this work.
A systematic series of merocyanines, synthetically varied in the number of chromophores
and subsitution pattern, attached to a benzene unit was investigated in cooperation with
the group of Prof. Dr. Frank Würthner at the University of Würzburg. The global analysis
of several TA experiments, and additional coherent 2D spectroscopy experiments, provided
the basis to elaborate a relaxation scheme which was applicable for all merocyanine
systems under investigation. This relaxation scheme is based on a double minimum on the
excited-state potential energy surface. One of these minima is assigned to an intramolecular
charge-transfer state which is stabilized in the bis- and tris-chromophoric dyes by
chromphore–chromophore interactions, resulting in an increase in excited-state lifetime.
Electro-optical absorption and density functional theory (DFT) calculations revealed a
preferential chromophore orientation which compensates most of the dipole moment of
the individual chromophores. Based on this structural assignment the conformationdependent
exciton energy splitting was calculated. The linear absorption spectra of the
multi-chromophoric merocyanines could be described by a combination of monomeric and
excitonic spectra.
Subsequently, a structurally complex polymeric squaraine dye was studied in collaboration
with the research groups of Prof. Dr. Christoph Lambert and Prof. Dr. Roland Mitric
at the University of Würzburg. This polymer consists of a superposition of zigzag and
helix structures depending on the solvent. High-level DFT calculations confirmed the previous
assignment that zigzag and helix structures can be treated as J- and H-aggregates,
respectively. TA experiments revealed that in dependence on the solvent as well as the
excitation energy, ultrafast energy transfer within the squaraine polymer proceeds from
initially excited helix segments to zigzag segments or vice versa. Additionally, 2D spectroscopy
confirmed the observed sub-picosecond dynamics. In contrast to other conjugated
polymers such as MEH-PPV, which is investigated in the last chapter, ultrafast
energy transfer in squaraine polymers is based on the matching of the density of states
between donor and acceptor segments due to the small reorganization energy in cyanine-like
chromophores.
Finally, the photo-induced dynamics of the aggregated phase of the conjugated polymer
MEH-PPV was investigated in cooperation with the group of Prof. Dr. Anna Köhler at the University of Bayreuth. Our collaborators had previously described the aggregation of MEH-PPV upon cooling by the formation of so-called HJ-aggregates based on exciton
theory. By TA measurements and by making use of an affiliated band analysis distinct
relaxation processes in the excited state and to the ground state were discriminated. By
employing 2D spectroscopy the energy transfer between different conjugated segments
within the aggregated polymer was resolved. The initial exciton relaxation within the
aggregated phase indicates a low exciton mobility, in contrast to the subsequent energy
transfer between different chromophores within several picoseconds.
This work contributes by its systematic study of structure-dependent relaxation dynamics
to the basic understanding of the structure-function relationship within complex
molecular systems. The investigated molecular classes display a high potential to increase
efficiencies of opto-electronic devices, e.g., organic solar cells, by the selective choice of
the molecular morphology.