Abstract

Phenol-benzimidazole and phenol-pyridine proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) dyad systems are computationally investigated to resolve the origins of the asymmetrically broadened H-bonded OH stretch transitions that have been previously reported using cryogenic ion vibrational spectroscopy in the ground electronic state. Two-dimensional (2D) potentials describing the strongly shared H atom are predicted to be very shallow along the H atom transfer coordinate, enabling dislocation of the H atom between the donor and acceptor groups upon excitation of the OH vibrational modes. These soft H atom potentials result in strong coupling between the OH modes, which exhibit significant bend-stretch mixing, and a large number of normal mode coordinates. Vibrational spectra are calculated using a Hamiltonian that linearly and quadratically couples the H atom potentials to over two dozen of the most strongly coupled normal modes treated at the harmonic level. The calculated vibrational spectra qualitatively reproduce the asymmetric shape and breadth of the experimentally observed bands in the 2300-3000 cm-1 range. Interestingly, these transitions fall well above the predicted OH stretch fundamentals, which are computed to be surprisingly red-shifted (<2000 cm-1). Time-dependent calculations predict rapid (<100 fs) relaxation of the excited OH modes and instant response from the lower-frequency normal modes, corroborating the strong coupling predicted by the model Hamiltonian. The results highlight a unique broadening mechanism and complicated anharmonic effects present within these biologically relevant PCET model systems.

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