Abstract

Eumelanin, the brown-black pigment found in organisms from bacteria to humans, dissipates solar energy and prevents photochemical damage. While the structure of eumelanin is unclear, it is thought to consist of an extremely heterogeneous collection of chromophores that absorb from the UV to the infrared, additively producing its remarkably broad absorption spectrum. However, the chromophores responsible for absorption by eumelanin and their excited state decay pathways remain highly uncertain. Using femtosecond broadband transient absorption spectroscopy, we address the excited state behavior of chromophore subsets that make up a synthetic eumelanin, DOPA melanin, and probe the heterogeneity of its chromophores. Tuning the excitation light over more than an octave from the UV to the visible and probing with the broadest spectral window used to study any form of melanin to date enable the detection of spectral holes with a linewidth of 0.6 eV that track the excitation wavelength. Transient spectral hole burning is a manifestation of extreme chemical heterogeneity, yet exciting these diverse chromophores unexpectedly produces a common photoinduced absorption spectrum and similar kinetics. This common photoresponse is assigned to the ultrafast formation of immobile charge transfer excitons that decay locally and that are formed among graphene-like chromophores in less than 200 fs. Raman spectroscopy reveals that chromophore heterogeneity in DOPA melanin arises from different sized domains of sp2-hybridized carbon and nitrogen atoms. Furthermore, we identify for the first time striking parallels between the excited state dynamics of eumelanin and disordered carbon nanomaterials, suggesting that they share common structural attributes.

Highlights

  • Melanin is most familiar as a family of pigments that color human skin and hair, but melanins are found throughout the tree of life in organisms ranging from bacteria and fungi to plants and mammals

  • Chromophore heterogeneity revealed by transient spectral hole burning It follows from the chemical disorder model that a pump pulse tuned to a speci c wavelength in the broad absorption spectrum of eumelanin will selectively excite a subset of chromophores

  • The broadband femtosecond transient absorption (TA) spectra reported in this study reveal transient hole burning in DOPA melanin, demonstrating that photoexcitation selectively interrogates different subsets of its chemically heterogeneous chromophores and providing the rst account of their intrinsic spectroscopic line shapes and dynamics

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Summary

Introduction

Melanin is most familiar as a family of pigments that color human skin and hair, but melanins are found throughout the tree of life in organisms ranging from bacteria and fungi to plants and mammals.

Results
Conclusion
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