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Competition of Several Energy-Transport Initiation Mechanisms Defines the Ballistic Transport Speed

[Image: see text] The ballistic regime of vibrational energy transport in oligomeric molecular chains occurs with a constant, often high, transport speed and high efficiency. Such a transport regime can be initiated by exciting a chain end group with a mid-infrared (IR) photon. To better understand...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nawagamuwage, Sithara U., Qasim, Layla N., Zhou, Xiao, Leong, Tammy X., Parshin, Igor V., Jayawickramarajah, Janarthanan, Burin, Alexander L., Rubtsov, Igor V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8287563/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34185993
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c03986
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] The ballistic regime of vibrational energy transport in oligomeric molecular chains occurs with a constant, often high, transport speed and high efficiency. Such a transport regime can be initiated by exciting a chain end group with a mid-infrared (IR) photon. To better understand the wavepacket formation process, two chemically identical end groups, azido groups with normal, (14)N(3)-, and isotopically substituted, (15)N(3)-, nitrogen atoms, were tested for wavepacket initiation in compounds with alkyl chains of n = 5, 10, and 15 methylene units terminated with a carboxylic acid (-a) group, denoted as (14)N(3)Cn-a and (15)N(3)Cn-a. The transport was initiated by exciting the azido moiety stretching mode, the ν(N≡N) tag, at 2100 cm(–1) ((14)N(3)Cn-a) or 2031 cm(–1) ((15)N(3)Cn-a). Opposite to the expectation, the ballistic transport speed was found to decrease upon (14)N(3) → (15)N(3) isotope editing. Three mechanisms of the transport initiation of a vibrational wavepacket are described and analyzed. The first mechanism involves the direct formation of a wavepacket via excitation with IR photons of several strong Fermi resonances of the tag mode with the ν(N=N) + ν(N–C) combination state while each of the combination state components is mixed with delocalized chain states. The second mechanism relies on the vibrational relaxation of an end-group-localized tag into a mostly localized end-group state that is strongly coupled to multiple delocalized states of a chain band. Harmonic mixing of ν(N=N) of the azido group with CH(2) wagging states of the chain permits a wavepacket formation within a portion of the wagging band, suggesting a fast transport speed. The third mechanism involves the vibrational relaxation of an end-group-localized mode into chain states. Two such pathways were found for the ν(N≡N) initiation: The ν(N=N) mode relaxes efficiently into the twisting band states and low-frequency acoustic modes, and the ν(N–C) mode relaxes into the rocking band states and low-frequency acoustic modes. The contributions of the three initiation mechanisms in the ballistic energy transport initiated by ν(N≡N) tag are quantitatively evaluated and related to the experiment. We conclude that the third mechanism dominates the transport in alkane chains of 5–15 methylene units initiated with the ν(N≡N) tag and the wavepacket generated predominantly at the CH(2) twisting band. The isotope effect of the transport speed is attributed to a larger contribution of the faster wavepackets for (14)N(3)Cn-a or to the different breadth of the wavepacket within the twisting band. The study offers a systematic description of different transport initiation mechanisms and discusses the requirements and features of each mechanism. Such analysis will be useful for designing novel materials for energy management.