j-specific dynamics in an optical centrifuge matthew j. murray, qingnan liu, carlos toro, amy s....

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J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray , Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 68 th Molecular Spectroscopy Symposium at the Ohio State University Funding: University of Maryland and National Science Foundation E

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Page 1: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge

Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin*Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland, College Park, MD

68th Molecular Spectroscopy Symposium at the Ohio State University

Funding: University of Maryland and National Science Foundation

E⃗

Page 2: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Extreme Orientation of Molecules

An optical centrifuge drives molecules to ultra-high rotational states with oriented angular momentum—a single MJ.

Compared to

Keller, A., Control of the Molecular Alignment or Orientation by Laser Pulses. In Mathematical Horizons for Quantum Physics, 2010.

Page 3: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Operating Principles of the Optical Centrifuge

• A molecule with an anisotropic polarizability, Da, aligns with the electric field.

• During the optical centrifuge pulse, the electric field angularly accelerates from 0 to 1013 rad/sec.

Interaction energy

22 cos4

1)( EU

Karczmarek, J.; Wright, J.; Corkum, P.; Ivanov, M., Optical centrifuge for molecules. Phys. Rev. Lett. 1999, 82 (17), 3420-3423.

Page 4: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Creating an Optical Centrifuge

Two oppositely-chirped 800 nm pulses, each with opposite circular polarization

(t)ω(t)ω2

1(t)Ω 21OC

2OCrot IΩ

2

1E • for CO2

• Energy of 19,000 cm-1

E⃗

Yuan, L. W.; Toro, C.; Bell, M.; Mullin, A. S., Spectroscopy of molecules in very high rotational states using an optical centrifuge. Faraday Discuss. 2011, 150, 101-111.

Create a linear electric field which angularly accelerates

Page 5: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Previous Optical Centrifuge Studies of CO2

Transient IR absorption: appearance of J=76 followed by relaxation (10 Torr)

Yuan, L. W.; Teitelbaum, S. W.; Robinson, A.; Mullin, A. S., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 2011, 108 (17),

“prompt” rise is pressure-dependent: collision-induced transient signals

Detector Response

Page 6: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

J-Specific Dynamics in the Optical Centrifuge

300 K distribution

Goal: Study the dynamics of a broad range of rotational states after the optical centrifuge pulse excites a sample

In this work we look at the dynamics of J=76, 54, 36, and 0.

Page 7: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Quantum-resolved Transient IR Absorption of CO2

High-J ProbingCO2(0000, J) + IR → CO2(0001, J±1)

Low-J ProbingCO2(0000, J) + IR → CO2(1001, J±1)

CO2 + Optical Centrifuge → CO2 (0000, J≈220)

CO2(0000, J≈220) + CO2(300 K) → CO2(0000, J) + CO2(0000, J’)

Page 8: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Optical Centrifuge and High Resolution Transient IR Spectrometer

*Optical Parametric Oscillator

Energy: 50 mJ/pulsePulsewidth: 100 psBeam waist: 26 µmRep. Rate: 10 Hz

OPO* λ~2.7 µm Diode Laser λ~4.3 µm

Page 9: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Assessment of Strong Field Phenomena

Compare transient absorption for CO2 J=76 with same total power (~35 mJ/pulse)

Page 10: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Transient Absorption Measurements of CO2 J=54 and 76

J=54J=76

t’=290 ns t’=2.0 ms t”=21 ms

t”=4.5 ms

• Transient appearance then decay is seen for both states

• J=76 appearance is ~10x faster than J=54

• Collision-induced decay of J=76 is ~5x faster than J=54

Page 11: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Doppler Broadened Transient Absorption Line Profile of J=76

τ1=170 ns

τ2=7.2 µs

10 ns between collisions at 10 Torr

Early Time Translational Temperatures

Long Time Translational Temperatures

Page 12: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Doppler Broadened Transient Absorption Line Profile of J=54

Early Time Translational Temperatures

Long Time Translational Temperatures

Page 13: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Time Dependent Temperatures and Populations for J=76 and J=54

τA=1.3 µs

τR=31 µs

Both J=76 and J=54 show molecules appear into these states with large translational energies.

τA=240 ns

τR=1.8 µs

J=54

J=76

J=76

J=54

Page 14: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Transient Absorption Measurements of CO2 J=36

Appearance in wingsDepletion at line center

Raw Transient

Smoothed Transient

Page 15: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Doppler Broadened Transient Absorption Line Profile of J=36

Appearance

Depletion

20 ns between collisions at 5 Torr

Page 16: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Time Dependent Temperature and Population for CO2 J=36

τA=2.5 µs

τD=1.2 µs

The rates at which population enters and leaves J=36 are only ~2x different.

Molecules appear into J=36 with high translational energy and those that leave the state have low translational energy.

Page 17: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Transient Absorption of CO2 J=0

Page 18: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Doppler Broadened Transient Line Profile of CO2 J=0Early Time Translational Temperatures

Long Time Translational Temperatures

τ=1.9 µs

Page 19: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Time Dependent Temperature and Population for J=0

τD=1.25 µs

τR=110 µs

We see molecules being depleted from J=0 and J=36 are from a slower subset of molecules in the initial 300 K ensemble.

Population recovery of J=0 is relatively slow.

Page 20: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

3-State Rotational Distribution

Use appearance population from J=76, 54, and 36.

Trot Decay ~32 Collisions

Page 21: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Quasi-Equilibrium at 550 K

J=54

J=0

Conservation of energy indicates that ~2% of CO2 molecules are

initially excited by the optical centrifuge to J ~220

Page 22: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Summary We have used high resolution transient IR absorption to

investigate the J-dependent behavior in an optical centrifuge.

We see evidence for fast translational energy gain followed by relaxation due to collisions in the optical centrifuge.

Results show evidence for long-lived energy content in molecules.

J-dependent profiles show the rotation to rotation-translation energy transfer process through a collisional cascade. The CO2 molecules reach a quasi-equilibrium temperature of ~550 K.

Page 23: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Quasi-Equilibrium at 550 K

J=54

J=0

E rotN J+kT i (N tot−NJ )+ 32k T i  N tot = 

52kT fN tot

Erot = Centrifuge-Induced Rotational Energy

NJ = Number Density of Centrifuged Molecules

Ntot = Total number density in cell

Ti = 300 K

Tf ≈ 550 K

Page 24: J-Specific Dynamics in an Optical Centrifuge Matthew J. Murray, Qingnan Liu, Carlos Toro, Amy S. Mullin* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University

Depletion Transient Absorption from Low J