posted on 2022-05-10, 14:10authored byJessika
L. S. Dean, Joseph A. Fournier
Acetylacetone
(AcAc) has proven to be a fruitful but highly challenging
model system for the experimental and computational interrogation
of strong intramolecular hydrogen bonds. Key questions remain, however,
regarding the identity of the minimum-energy structure of AcAc and
the dynamics of intramolecular proton transfer. Here, we investigate
the OH/OD stretch and bend regions of the enol tautomer of AcAc and
its deuterated isotopologue with transient absorption and 2D IR spectroscopy.
The OH bend region reveals a single dominant diagonal transition near
1625 cm–1 with intense cross peaks to lower-frequency
modes, demonstrating highly mixed fingerprint transitions that contain
OH bend character. The anharmonic coupling of the OH bend results
in a highly elongated OH bend excited-state absorption transition
that indicates a large manifold of OH bend overtone/combination bands
in the OH stretch region that leads to strong bend–stretch
Fermi resonance interactions. The OH and OD stretch regions consist
of broad ground-state bleach signals, but there is no clear evidence
of ω21 excited-state absorptions due to rapid population
relaxation arising from strong intramolecular coupling to bending,
fingerprint, and low-frequency H-bond modes. Orientational relaxation
dynamics persist for timescales longer than the vibrational lifetimes,
with polarization anisotropy components decaying within approximately
2 and 10 periods of the O–O oscillation for the OH and OD stretch,
respectively. The significant isotopic dependence of the orientational
dynamics is discussed in the context of intramolecular mode coupling,
diffusional processes, and contributions from proton/deuteron transfer
dynamics.