Short- and Long-Range Solvation Effects on the Transient UV-Vis Absorption Spectra of a Ru(II)-Polypyridine Complex Disentangled by Nonequilibrium Molecular Dynamics
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2019
abstract:
Evidence of subtle effects in the dynamic reorganization of a protic solvent in its first- and farther-neighbor shells,
in response to the sudden change in the solute's electronic distribution upon excitation, is unveiled by a multilevel
computational approach. Through the combination of nonequilibrium molecular dynamics and quantum mechanical
calculations, the experimental time evolution of the transient T1 absorption spectra of a heteroleptic Ru(II)-polypyridine
complex in ethanol or dimethyl sulfoxide solution is reproduced and rationalized in terms of both fast and slow solvent reequilibration
processes, which are found responsible for the red shift and broadening experimentally observed only in the protic
medium. Solvent orientational correlation functions and a time-dependent analysis of the solvation structure confirm that the
initial, fast observed red shift can be traced back to the destruction-formation of hydrogen bond networks in the first-neighbor
shell, whereas the subsequent shift, evident in the [20-500] ps range and accompanied by a large broadening of the signal, is
connected to a collective reorientation of the second and farther solvation shells, which significantly changes the electrostatic
embedding felt by the excited solute.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
nonequilibrium dynamics; force-fields; solvation; transient spectroscopy
List of contributors:
Iagatti, Alessandro; Foggi, Paolo; Prampolini, Giacomo
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