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Mission
Statement The aim of the project encompasses real-time determination
of ultrafast structural dynamics of molecular and biomolecular systems. The
first main target is the determination of the structures while they explore the
energy landscapes. These energy landscapes are not static but fluctuating due
to the dynamical interactions of these structures with the surroundings (such
as liquid solvent shells, or the protein backbone). The ultrafast nature of these
fluctuations necessitate femtosecond time resolution for the structure-resolving
spectroscopic techniques. The second main target is the determination of biomolecular
structures that undergo substantial geometric rearrangements induced by optically
triggered chemical reactions (photochemistry). Chemical reactions studied include
hydrogen and proton transfer, electron transfer, bond fission, ring-opening/closure
and cis/trans isomerizations. These activities fall in the field of ultrafast
chemistry, also known as femtochemistry. Methodology The
powerful method that has been pursued since 1997 is ultrafast vibrational spectroscopy.
Here the dynamics are studied by inspection of mid-infrared (IR) active or Raman-active
vibrational marker modes. Structural dynamics in the electronic ground state have
been investigated with IR pump/ IR probe and IR photon echo spectroscopy. Dynamical
rearrangements of structures induced by an optical trigger pulse tuned to an electronic
resonance (a UV/VIS-pump) have been followed with time-delayed transmission changes
of mid-IR probe pulses or by collection of resonance Raman-emission. Investigated
Systems
Ultrafast vibrational spectroscopy is used to study the structural
dynamics of hydrogen bonds (in hydrogen-bonded liquids such as water,
or biomolecular hydrogen-bonded complexes consisting of e.g. carboxylic
acids), of chemical reactions such as hydrogen and proton transfer
(e.g. photoacid-base neutralization reactions, and bimolecular donor-acceptor
electron transfer), bond cleavage (e.g. NO-heme protein bond fission),
ring-opening/closure reactions in photochromic switches and cis/trans
isomerizations (e.g. in photoactive yellow protein), and of vibrational
energy flow (intramolecular vibrational redistribution, vibrational
cooling). In all these studies the dynamics are investigated of
small model systems representing biomolecular structural motifs,
or even on large biomolecules themselves (proteins).
Grouping of Activities The
activities can be grouped into three research directions: Further
Information
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