posted on 2018-09-11, 00:00authored byAditi Bhattacherjee, Kirsten Schnorr, Sven Oesterling, Zheyue Yang, Tian Xue, Regina de Vivie-Riedle, Stephen R. Leone
The ultraviolet-induced photochemistry
of five-membered heterocyclic
rings often involves ring opening as a prominent excited-state relaxation
pathway. The identification of this particular photoinduced mechanism,
however, presents a challenge for many experimental methods. We show
that femtosecond X-ray transient absorption spectroscopy at the carbon
K-edge (∼284 eV) provides core-to-valence spectral fingerprints
that enable the unambiguous identification of ring-opened isomers
of organic heterocycles. The unique differences in the electronic
structure between a carbon atom bonded to the oxygen in the ring versus
a carbon atom set free of the oxygen in the ring-opened product are
readily apparent in the X-ray spectra. Ultrafast ring opening via
C–O bond fission occurs within ∼350 fs in 266-nm photoexcited
furfural, as evidenced by fingerprint core (carbon 1s) electronic
transitions into a nonbonding orbital of the open-chain carbene intermediate
at 283.3 eV. The lack of recovery of the 1sπ* ground-state depletion
in furfural at 286.4 eV indicates that internal conversion to the
ground state is a minor channel. These experimental results, augmented
by recent advances in the generation of isolated attosecond pulses
at the carbon K-edge, will pave the way for probing ring-opened conical
intersection dynamics in the future.