541 Physikalische Chemie
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Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
- Fraunhofer-Institut für Silicatforschung ISC (3)
- Institut für Optik und Atomare Physik, Technische Universität Berlin, 10623 Berlin, Germany (2)
- Laboratory for Chemistry and Life Science, Institute of Innovative Research, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Yokohama 226-8503, Japan (2)
- Center for Nanosystems Chemistry (CNC), Universität Würzburg (1)
- Center for Nanosystems Chemistry (CNC), Universität Würzburg, Am Hubland, 97074 Würzburg, Germany (1)
- Center of Excellence for Science and Technology - Integration of Mediterranean region (STIM), Faculty of Science, University of Split, Poljička cesta 35, 2100 Split, Croatia (1)
- Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Ke Karlovu 5, 121 16 Prague, Czech Republic (1)
- Departamento de Química, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 28049 Madrid, Spain (1)
- Department of Chemistry, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, Brook-Taylor-Strasse 2, 12489 Berlin, Germany (1)
- Department of Chemistry, Sungkyunkwan University, 440-746 Suwon, Republic of Korea (1)
ResearcherID
- M-1240-2017 (1)
Reactive hydrocarbon molecules like radicals, biradicals and carbenes are not only key players in combustion processes and interstellar and atmospheric chemistry, but some of them are also important intermediates in organic synthesis. These systems typically possess many low-lying, strongly coupled electronic states. After light absorption, this leads to rich photodynamics characterized by a complex interplay of nuclear and electronic motion, which is still not comprehensively understood and not easy to investigate both experimentally and theoretically. In order to elucidate trends and contribute to a more general understanding, we here review our recent work on excited-state dynamics of open-shell hydrocarbon species using time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy and field-induced surface hopping simulations, and report new results on the excited-state dynamics of the tropyl and the 1-methylallyl radical. The different dynamics are compared, and the difficulties and future directions of time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy and excited state dynamics simulations of open-shell hydrocarbon molecules are discussed.
In the last two decades, coherent multidimensional femtosecond spectroscopy has become a powerful and versatile tool to investigate chemical dynamics of a broad variety of quantum systems. The combination of transient information, equivalent to pumpprobe spectroscopy, with information about coupling between energetic states and the system environment allows an extensive insight into atomic and molecular properties. Many experimental 2D setups employ the coherence-detected approach, where nonlinear system responses are emitted as coherent electric _elds which are detected after spatial separation from the excitation pulses. As an alternative to this experimentally demanding approach, population-based 2D spectroscopy has been established. Here, the coherent information is encoded in the phases of a collinear excitation-pulse train and extracted from incoherent signals like uorescence via phase cycling. In principle, the use of uorescence as observable can boost the sensitivity down to the single-molecule level. The aim of this work was the realization of a pulse-shaper assisted fully collinear uorescence-detected 2D setup and the conducting of proof-of-principle experiments in the liquid phase. This inherently phase-stable and compact setup has been presented in chapter 3, with the utilized pulse shaper granting amplitude and phase modulation on a shot-to-shot basis. Two di_erent types of white-light sources have been applied and evaluated with regard to their respective advantages for 2D uorescence spectroscopy. A variety of artifact sources that can occur with the present setup have been discussed, and correction schemes and instructions for avoiding these artifacts have been provided. In chapter 4, the setup has been demonstrated by employing a four-pulse sequence on cresyl violet in ethanol. A detailed data-acquisition and data-analysis procedure has been presented, where phase cycling is used for extraction of the nonlinear contributions. Depending on the phase-cycling scheme, it is possible to recover all nonlinear contributions in a single measurement. Well-known quantum-beating behavior of cresyl violet during the population time could be reproduced. Due to measuring in a rotating-frame environment and 1 kHz shot-to-shot pulse incrementation, it was possible to obtain a 2D spectrum for one population time in 6 s. Via error evaluation it has been shown that 10_ averaging (1 min) is su_cient to obtain a root-mean-square error of < 0:05 compared to 400_ averaging, proving that the utilized acquisition scheme is well suited. The realization of the _rst experimental uorescence-detected 2Q 2D experiment and the _rst experimental access to the theoretically predicted 1Q-2Q contribution
Space- and time-resolved UV-to-NIR surface spectroscopy and 2D nanoscopy at 1 MHz repetition rate
(2019)
We describe a setup for time-resolved photoemission electron microscopy (TRPEEM) with aberration correction enabling 3 nm spatial resolution and sub-20 fs temporal resolution. The latter is realized by our development of a widely tunable (215–970 nm) noncollinear optical parametric amplifier (NOPA) at 1 MHz repetition rate. We discuss several exemplary applications. Efficient photoemission from plasmonic Au nanoresonators is investigated with phase-coherent pulse pairs from an actively stabilized interferometer. More complex excitation fields are created with a liquid-crystal-based pulse shaper enabling amplitude and phase shaping of NOPA pulses with spectral components from 600 to 800 nm. With this system we demonstrate spectroscopy within a single plasmonic nanoslit resonator by spectral amplitude shaping and investigate the local field dynamics with coherent two-dimensional (2D) spectroscopy at the nanometer length scale (“2D nanoscopy”). We show that the local response varies across a distance as small as 33 nm in our sample. Further, we report two-color pump–probe experiments using two independent NOPA beamlines. We extract local variations of the excited-state dynamics of a monolayered 2D material (WSe2) that we correlate with low-energy electron microscopy (LEEM) and reflectivity (LEER) measurements. Finally, we demonstrate the in-situ sample preparation capabilities for organic thin films and their characterization via spatially resolved electron diffraction and dark-field LEEM.
The aim of this thesis was to develop new automatic enhanced sampling methods by extending the idea of Parrinello’s metadynamics to multistate problems and by introducing new quantum-mechanical electronic collective variables. These methods open up a rich perspective for applications to the photophysical processes in complex molecular systems, which play a major role in many natural processes such as vision and photosynthesis, but also in the development of new materials for organic electronics, whose function depends on specific electronic properties such as biradicalicity.
Doping plays a decisive role for the functionality of semiconductor-based (opto-)electronic
devices. Hence, the technological utilization of semiconductors necessitates control and a
fundamental understanding of the doping process. However, for low-dimensional systems like
carbon nanotubes, neither concentration nor distribution of charge carriers is currently well known.
The research presented in this thesis investigated the doping of semiconducting carbon nanotubes by spectroscopic methods. Samples of highly purified, intrinsic (6,5) single-wall carbon nanotubes were fabricated using polymer stabilization.
Chapter 4 showed that both electro- and redox chemical $p$-doping lead to identical bleaching,
blueshift, broadening and asymmetry of the S$_1$ exciton absorption band. The similar spectral changes induced by both doping schemes suggest that optical spectra can not be used to infer what process was used for doping. Perhaps more importantly, it also indicates that the distribution of charges and the character of the charge transfer states does not depend on the method by which doping was achieved.
The detailed analysis of the doping-induced spectral changes in chapter 5 suggests that surplus charges are distributed inhomogeneously. The hypothesis of carrier localization is consistent with the high sensitivity of the S$_1$ exciton photoluminescence to additional charge carriers and with the stretched-exponential decay of the exciton population following ultrafast excitation.
Both aspects are in good agreement with diffusion-limited contact quenching of excitons
at localized charges. Moreover, localized charges act – similar to structural defects – as
perturbations to the bandstructure as evidenced by a doping-induced increase of the D-band
antiresonance in the mid-infrared spectrum.
Quantum mechanical model calculations also suggest that counterions play a crucial role in
carrier localization. Counterion adsorption at the nanotube surface is thus believed to induce charge traps of more than 100 meV depth with a carrier localization length on the order of 3 - 4 nm. The doping-induced bleach of interband absorption is accompanied by an absorption increase in the IR region below 600 meV. The observed shift of the IR peak position indicates a continuous transition from localized to rather delocalized charge carriers. This transition is caused by the increase of the overlap of charge carrier wavefunctions at higher charge densities and was modeled by classical Monte-Carlo simulations of intraband absorption.
Chapter 6 discussed the spectroscopy of heavily (degenerately) doped nanotubes, which are
characterized by a Drude-response of free-carrier intraband absorption in the optical conductivity spectrum. In the NIR spectral region, the S$_1$ exciton and X$+^_1$ trion absorption is replaced by a nearly 1 eV broad and constant absorption signal, the so-called H-band. The linear and transient absorption spectra of heavily doped nanotubes suggest that the H-band can be attributed to free-carrier interband transitions.
Chapter 7 dealt with the quantification of charge carrier densities by linear absorption spectroscopy.
A particularly good measure of the carrier density is the S$_1$ exciton bleach. For a
bleach below about 50 %, the carrier density is proportional to the bleach. At higher doping
levels, deviations from the linear behavior were observed. For doping levels exceeding a
fully bleached S$_1$ band, the determination of the normalized oscillator strength f$\text{1st}$ over the
whole first subband region (trion, exciton, free e-h pairs) is recommended for quantification of carrier densities. Based on the nanotube density of states, the carrier density $n$ can be estimated using $n = 0.74\,\text{nm}^{−1} \cdot (1 − f_\text{1st})$.
In the last part of this thesis (chapter 8), the time-resolved spectroelectrochemistry was
extended to systems beyond photostable carbon nanotube films. The integration of a flowelectrolysis cell into the transient absorption spectrometer allows the investigation of in-situ electrochemically generated but photounstable molecules due to a continuous exchange of sample volume. First time-resolved experiments were successfully performed using the dye
methylene blue and its electrochemically reduced form leucomethylene blue.
Major advances in the chemistry of 5th and 6th row heavy p-block element compounds have recently uncovered intriguing reactivity patterns towards small molecules such as H\(_2\), CO\(_2\), and ethylene. However, well-defined, homogeneous insertion reactions with carbon monoxide, one of the benchmark substrates in this field, have not been reported to date. We demonstrate here, that a cationic bismuth amide undergoes facile insertion of CO into the Bi–N bond under mild conditions. This approach grants direct access to the first cationic bismuth carbamoyl species. Its characterization by NMR, IR, and UV/vis spectroscopy, elemental analysis, single-crystal X-ray analysis, cyclic voltammetry, and DFT calculations revealed intriguing properties, such as a reversible electron transfer at the bismuth center and an absorption feature at 353 nm ascribed to a transition involving σ- and π-type orbitals of the bismuth-carbamoyl functionality. A combined experimental and theoretical approach provided insight into the mechanism of CO insertion. The substrate scope could be extended to isonitriles.
In this thesis, the photophysics and spin chemistry of donor-photosensitizer-acceptor triads were investigated. While all investigated triads comprised a TAA as an electron donor and a NDI as an electron acceptor, the central photosensitizers (PS) were different chromophores based on the dipyrrin-motif. The purity and identity of all target compounds could be confirmed by NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry and elemental analysis.
The first part of the work dealt with dipyrrinato-complexes of cyclometalated heavy transition metals. The successful synthesis of novel triads based on Ir(III), Pt(II) and Pd(II) was presented. The optical and electrochemical properties indicated charge separation (CS), which was confirmed by transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy. TA-spectroscopy also revealed that the process of CS is significantly slower and less efficient for the triads based on Pt(II) and Pd(II) than for the analogous Ir(III) triads. This is mostly due to a much more convoluted reaction pathway, comprising several intermediate states before the formation of the final charge separated state (CSS2). On the other hand, CSS2 exhibits long lifetimes which are dependent on the central metal ion. While the Ir(III) triads show lifetimes of about 0.5 µs in MeCN, the Pt(II) and Pd(II) analogues show lifetimes of 1.5 µs. The magnetic field effect on the charge recombination (CR) kinetics of CSS2 was investigated by magnetic field dependent ns-TA spectroscopy and could be rationalized based on a classical kinetic scheme comprising only one magnetic field dependent rate constant k±. The behavior of k± shows a clear separation of the coherent and incoherent spin interconversion mechanisms. While the coherent spin evolution is due to the isotropic hyperfine coupling with the magnetic nuclei of the radical centers, the incoherent spin relaxation is due to a rotational modulation of the anisotropic hyperfine coupling tensor and is strongly dependent on the viscosity of the solvent. This dependence could be used to measure the nanoviscosity of the oligomeric solvent pTHF, which was found to be distinctly different from its macroviscosity.
The second part of the work dealt with bisdipyrrinato complexes and their bridged porphodimethenato (PDM) analogues. Initially, the suitability of the different chromophores for the use as PS in donor-acceptor substituted triads was tested by a systematic investigation of their steady state and transient properties. While the PDM-complex of Zn(II) and Pd(II) exhibited promising characteristics such as a high exited state lifetime and relatively intense emission, the purely organic parent PDM and the non-bridged bisdipyrrinato-Pd(II) complex were less suitable. The difference between the two Pd(II) complexes could be explained by a structural rearrangement of the non-bridged complex which results in a non-emissive metal centered triplet state with disphenoidal geometry. This rearrangement is prevented by the dimethylmethylene-bridges in the bridged analogue resulting in higher phosphorescence quantum yields and excited state lifetimes.
With the exception of the Zn(II)PDM-complex, the synthesis of novel donor acceptor substituted triads could be realized for all desired central chromophores. They were investigated equivalently to the cyclometalated triads described in the first part. The steady state properties indicate a stronger electronic coupling between the subunits due to the lack of unsaturated bridges between the donor and the central chromophore. Photoinduced CS occurs in all investigated triads. Due to the low exited state lifetimes of the central chromophores, CSS is formed less efficiently for the triads based on the unbridged Pd(II)-complex as well as the purely organic PDM. In the triad based on the bridged Pd(II) complex, the CR of CSS2 is faster than its formation resulting in low intermediate concentrations. For its elongated analogue, this is not the case and CSS2 can be observed clearly. Although the spin-chemistry of the triads based on bisdipyrrinato-Pd(II) and porphodimethenato-Pd(II) is less well understood, first interpretations of the magnetic field dependent decay kinetics gave results approximately equivalent to those obtained for the cyclometalated triads. Furthermore, the MFE was shown to be useful for the investigation of the quantum yield of CS and the identity of the observed CSSs.
In both parts of this work, the influence of the central photosensitizer on the photophysics and the spin chemistry of the triads could be shown. While the process of CS is directly dependent on the PS, the PS usually is not directly involved in the final CSSs. None the less, it can still indirectly affect the CR and spin chemistry of the CSS since it influences the electronic coupling between donor and acceptor, as well as the geometry of the triads.
We present a theoretical study on exciton–exciton annihilation (EEA) in a molecular dimer. This process is monitored using a fifth-order coherent two-dimensional (2D) spectroscopy as was recently proposed by Dostál et al. [Nat. Commun. 9, 2466 (2018)]. Using an electronic three-level system for each monomer, we analyze the different paths which contribute to the 2D spectrum. The spectrum is determined by two entangled relaxation processes, namely, the EEA and the direct relaxation of higher lying excited states. It is shown that the change of the spectrum as a function of a pulse delay can be linked directly to the presence of the EEA process.
We demonstrate two-quantum (2Q) coherent two-dimensional (2D)electronic spectroscopy using a shot-to-shot-modulated pulse shaper and fluorescence detection. Broadband collinear excitation is realized with the supercontinuum output of an argon-filled hollow-core fiber, enabling us to excite multiple transitions simultaneously in the visible range. The 2Q contribution is extracted via a three-pulse sequence with 16-fold phase cycling and simulated employing cresyl violet as a model system. Furthermore, we report the first experimental realization of one-quantum−two-quantum (1Q-2Q) 2D spectroscopy, offering less congested spectra as compared with the 2Q implementation. We avoid scattering artifacts and nonresonant solvent contributions by using fluorescence as the observable. This allows us to extract quantitative information about doubly excited states that agree with literature expectations. The high sensitivity and background-free nature of fluorescence detection allow for a general applicability of this method to many other systems.
Die vorliegende Dissertation widmete sich der Aufklärung der Photodissoziationsdynamik der drei Xylyl-Radikale ortho-, meta- und para-Xylyl sowie des Benzyl-Radikals mit Hilfe des Velocity-Map-Imagings. Diese reaktiven Intermediate sind insbesondere im Bereich der Verbrennungschemie von hoher Relevanz, da sie die primären Zerfallsprodukte der Xylole und des Toluols darstellen, welche als Antiklopfmittel in Ottokraftstoffen Verwendung finden.Dementsprechend ist eine Betrachtung des weiteren Zerfalls dieser resonanz-stabilisierten Radikale, insbesondere unter dem Gesichtspunkt der Rußbildung, von entscheidender Bedeutung.
Für alle drei Xylyl-Radikale konnte eine selektive pyrolytische Generierung aus den entsprechenden 2-(Methylphenyl)ethylnitriten realisiert werden. Die isomerspezifische Identifikation erfolgte mit Hilfe von REMPI-Spektroskopie der jeweiligen D0 -> D3-Übergänge. Nachfolgend wurde die Photodissoziation aller drei Xylyl-Isomere nach Anregung des D3-Zustandes bei ca. 310 nm und nach Anregung der D-Bande bei 250 nm untersucht. Das „einfachste” Experiment stellte in diesem Zusammenhang die Photodissoziation des para-Xylyl-Radikals dar. Es konnte die von Hemberger et al. in thermischen Zerfallsexperimenten beobachtete Reaktion p-Xylyl -> p-Xylylen + H verifiziert werden. Die VMI-Experimente lieferten die Kennwerte <fT>(309.6nm) = 33 % und <fT>(250nm) = 19 % unter Erhalt isotroper Images für beide Anregungswellenlängen. Die dazugehörigen Dissoziationsratenkonstanten wurden zu kH(309.6nm) ≈ 10^8 s-1 und kH(250nm) ≈ 5*10^7 s-1 bestimmt. Es ist verblüffend, dass die Photodissoziation scheinbar bei der höheren Anregungswellenlänge von 309.6 nm (und somit bei geringerer Anregungsenergie) schneller verläuft als bei 250 nm. Darüber hinaus ist es nicht möglich, die beobachteten Raten mittels des statistischen Modells der RRKM-Theorie zu beschreiben. Des Weiteren konnten auch die Translationsenergieverteilungen nicht mit dem „Quack-Fit” für statistische Dissoziationen angefittet werden. Bei der Photodissoziation des para-Xylyl-Radikals liegt eine Dissoziation nach Rückkehr in den rovibronisch hochangeregten elektronischen Grundzustand infolge der Photoanregung vor. Hierbei thermalisiert die innere Energie im elektronischen Grundzustand vor der Dissoziation scheinbar nur teilweise, sodass keine vollständige statistische Verteilung dieser innerhalb des para-Xylyls gegeben ist. Da dies eine Grundvoraussetzung der gängigen statistischen Modelle darstellt, ist es nicht verwunderlich, dass keine quantitative Reproduktion der experimentellen Ergebnisse durch Anwendung dieser Modelle ermöglicht wird.
Bei entsprechenden Experimenten zum ortho-Isomer konnten diese statistischen Modelle ebenfalls nicht zur quantitativen Beschreibung der Dissoziation verwendet werden. Abermals wurde mit kH(311.1nm) ≈ 10^8 s-1 und kH(250nm) ≈ 5*10^7 s-1 eine schnellere Dissoziation bei geringerer Anregungsenergie festgestellt. Dies erscheint demnach charakteristisch für die Xylyl-Radikale. Innerhalb der VMI-Experimente wurden isotrope Verteilungen erhalten, deren Fragmenttranslationsenergieverteilung nach Anregung des D3-Niveaus bei 311.1 nm jedoch nicht durch die von Hemberger et al. beschriebene Hauptreaktion o-Xylyl -> o-Xylylen + H erklärt werden konnte. Eine Fragmentation nach o-Xylyl -> Benzocyclobuten + H konnte auf diesem Weg als Hauptdissoziationspfad identifiziert werden. Innerhalb der Studien von Hemberger et al. ist eine Reaktion zu Benzocyclobuten bei Anregung mit 311.1 nm energetisch nicht zugänglich. Mittels quantenchemischer Rechnung konnte jedoch ein bislang unbekannter, energetisch zugänglicher Reaktionspfad zur Bildung von Benzocyclobuten unter simultaner Ringschlussreaktion und Wasserstofffragmentation identifiziert und charakterisiert werden. Die Kennwerte der Photodissoziationsreaktion des ortho-Xylyls konnten hierdurch zu <fT>(311.1nm) = 30 % und <fT>(250nm) = 16 % bestimmt werden. Wie bereits im Fall des para-Isomers liegt die Vermutung nahe, dass es sich um eine Dissoziation aus dem rovibronisch hoch-angeregten elektronischen Grundzustand handelt, welcher nicht vollständig vor der Fragmentation thermalisiert.
Im Rahmen der Experimente zum letzten der drei Xylyl-Isomere, dem meta-Xylyl-Radikal, konnte mit VMI eine Fragmentation nach m-Xylyl -> m-Xylylen + H als Hauptdissoziationpfad ausgeschlossen werden. Innerhalb der Experimente nach Anregung des D3-Niveaus um 310 nm konnten mit para-Xylylen und Benzocyclobuten zwei Reaktionsprodukte festgestellt werden, welche die erhaltene Translationsenergieverteilung erklären könnten, wobei die entsprechende maximale Überschussenergie einer Fragmentation zu para-Xylylen den Nullabfall der Verteilung geringfügig besser widerspiegelt. Die mittlere Fragmenttranslationsenergie liegt mit <fT>(p-Xylylen) = 29 % respektive <fT>(Bcb) = 25 % leicht unterhalb der entsprechenden Kennwerte der para- beziehungsweise ortho-Xylyl Experimente. Durch die nötige, der Dissoziation vorausgehende Isomerisierung scheint ein höherer Thermalisierungsgrad der Schwingungs- und Rotationsenergie innerhalb des elektronischen Grundzustands erreicht zu werden, aus welchem die geringen <fT>-Werte resultieren könnten. Der Effekt verminderter <fT>-Werte wurde in den Experimenten bei 250 nm nicht gefunden (<fT>(p-Xylylen) = 19 % respektive <fT>(Bcb) = 17 %). Vergleicht man an dieser Stelle die <ET>- anstelle der <fT>-Werte (<ET>(para) = 0.41 eV, <ET>(ortho) = 0.38 eV, <ET>(meta) = 0.41 eV), stellt man fest, dass <ET>(meta) = <ET>(para) gilt und somit ein weiteres Indiz dafür gefunden wurde, dass eine Umlagerung zu para-Xylyl mit anschließender Fragmentation zu para-Xylylen möglicherweise gegenüber jener zum ortho-Isomer mit nachfolgender Bcb-Bildung bevorzugt ist. Dies würde darüber hinaus im Einklang mit den Studien von Hemberger et al. stehen, in welchen beim thermischen Zerfall des meta-Xylyls para-Xylylen als alleiniges Fragmentationsprodukt gefunden wurde. Eine Betrachtung der Umlagerung mittels RRKM wies jedoch keinen bevorzugten Isomerisierungspfad aus. Schlussendlich lässt sich aufgrund der ermittelten Ratenkonstanten (kH(310nm) ≈ 10^8 s-1, kH(250nm) ≈ 4*10^7 s-1) sowie den <fT>-Werten vermuten, dass die Isomerisierung langsamer als die Dissoziation bei 310 nm verläuft, jedoch zumindest auf einer ähnlichen Zeitskala wie die entsprechende Dissoziation nach Anregung bei 250 nm. Eine zweifelsfreie Interpretation der meta-Xylyl Experimente gestaltet sich jedoch als schwierig.
Innerhalb der Studien zur Photodissoziation des Benzyl-Radikals konnten literaturbekannte Daten zur Fragmentation nach Anregung um 250 nm in guter Übereinstimmung reproduziert werden. Die experimentellen Daten zur Untersuchung der Photodissoziation nach Anregung des D3-Niveaus konnten jedoch nicht eindeutig interpretiert werden. Die literaturbekannte Lage des D3-Niveaus bei 305.3 nm konnte mittels REMPI-Spektroskopie reproduziert werden und anschließende 1H-Photofragmentspektren zeigten, dass eine Anregung des D3-Niveaus zur Bildung von Wasserstofffragmenten führt. Die beobachteten 1H-Fragmente zeigten jedoch eine deutlich zu hohe Überschussenergie für eine Einphotonenabsorption, sodass diese Mehrphotonenabsorptionen zugeordnet werden müssen. Es lässt sich vermuten, dass die Wasserstofffragmente aus einer Anregung eines „superexcited states” oberhalb des Ionisationspotentials, wahrscheinlich durch Zweiphotonenabsorption, stammen. Dieser „superexcited state” zeigt scheinbar keine (vollständige) Autoionisation und führt nachfolgend zumindest teilweise zur Fragmentation des Benzyl-Radikals. In der Folge liegt die Vermutung nahe, dass die Energien eines einzelnen 305 nm-Photons nicht zur Initiierung einer Photodissoziation des Benzyl-Radikals ausreichend ist oder aber, dass diese Photodissoziation zu langsam ist, um sie in einem VMI-Experiment zu beobachten. Potential für weitere Experimente zur Photodissoziation des Benzyl-Radikals nach Anregung des D3-Niveaus wird an dieser Stelle nicht gesehen.