Abstract

The movements of molecules at interfaces and surfaces are restricted by their asymmetric environments, leading to anisotropic orientational motions. In this work, in-plane orientational motions of the -C=O and -CF3 groups of coumarin 153 (C153) at the air/water interface were measured using time-resolved (TR) vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG). The in-plane orientational time constants of the -C=O and -CF3 groups of C153 are found to be 41.5 ± 8.2 and 36.0 ± 4.5ps. These values are over five-times faster than that of 198 ± 15ps for the permanent dipole of the whole C153molecule at the interface, which may indicate that the two groups experience different interfacial friction in the plane. These differences could also be the result of the permanent dipole of C153 being almost five times those of the -C=O and -CF3 groups. The difference in orientational motions reveals the microscopic heterogeneous environment that molecules experience at the interface. While the interfacial dynamics of the two functional groups are similar, our TR-SFG experiments allowed the quantification of the in-plane dynamics of individual functional groups for the first time. Our experimental findings about the interfacial molecular motion have implications for molecular rotations, energy transfer, and charge transfer at material interfaces, photocatalysis interfaces, and biological cell/membrane aqueous interfaces.

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