Abstract

Organic molecules with aromatic groups at the aqueous interfaces play a central role in atmospheric chemistry, green chemistry, and on-water synthesis. Insights into the organization of interfacial organic molecules can be obtained using surface-specific vibrational sum-frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy. However, the origin of the aromatic C-H stretching mode peak is unknown, prohibiting us from connecting the SFG signal to the interfacial molecular structure. Here, we explore the origin of the aromatic C-H stretching response by heterodyne-detected SFG (HD-SFG) at the liquid/vapor interface of benzene derivatives and find that, irrespective of the molecular orientation, the sign of the aromatic C-H stretching signals is negative for all the studied solvents. Together with density functional theory (DFT) calculations, we reveal that the interfacial quadrupole contribution dominates, even for the symmetry-broken benzene derivatives, although the dipole contribution is non-negligible. We propose a simple evaluation of the molecular orientation based on the aromatic C-H peak area.

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