Abstract

The UV-induced decay dynamics of N-methyl-2-pyridone is investigated using a femtosecond time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy method. Irradiation in the wavelength range of 339.3-258.9 nm prepares N-methyl-2-pyridone molecules with very different vibrational levels of the S1(11ππ*) state. For v' = 0 (origin) and a few low-energy vibrational levels slightly above the S1 state origin, the radiative decay channel is in operation for some specific vibrations. This is revealed by the excited-state lifetime of ≫1 ns. In addition, some other nearby S1 vibronic states have a much shorter lifetime in the range of several picoseconds to a few tens of picoseconds, indicating that the radiation-less decay to the ground state (S0) via internal conversion is the dominant channel for them. As the pump wavelength slightly decreases, the radiative decay is suddenly not important at all, and the deactivation rate of the S1 state becomes faster. At shorter pump wavelengths, the lifetime of highly excited vibrational states of the S1 state further decreases with the increase in the vibrational excess energy. This study provides quantitative information about the excitation energy-dependent decay dynamics of the S1 state of N-methyl-2-pyridone. Methyl substitution effects on the excited-state dynamics of 2-pyridone are also discussed.

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