Abstract

The dynamics of intramolecular hydrogen-bonding involving sulfur atoms as acceptors is studied using two-dimensional infrared (2DIR) spectroscopy. The molecular system is a tertiary alcohol whose donating hydroxy group is embedded in a hydrogen-bond potential with torsional C3-symmetry about the carbon-oxygen bond. The linear and 2DIR-spectra recorded in the OH-stretching region of the alcohol can be simulated very well using Kubo's line shape theory based on the cumulant expansion for evaluating the linear and nonlinear optical response functions. The correlation function for OH-stretching frequency fluctuations reveals an ultrafast component decaying with a time constant of 700 fs, which is in line with the apparent decay of the center line slopes averaged over absorption and bleach/emission signals. In addition, a quasi-static inhomogeneity is detected, which prevents the 2DIR line shape to fully homogenize within the observation window of 4 ps. The experimental data were then analyzed in more detail using a full ab initio approach that merges time-dependent structural information from classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with an OH-stretching frequency map derived from density functional theory (DFT). The latter method was also used to obtain a complementary transition dipole map to account for non-Condon effects. The 2DIR-spectra obtained from the MD/DFT method are in good agreement with the experimental data at early waiting delays, thereby corroborating an assignment of the fast decay of the correlation function to the dynamics of hydrogen-bond breakage and formation.

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