Professor of Physics and Chemistry
About
The majority of interesting reactions from a biological, environmental, or engineering perspective occur in fluid condensed phase environments. In such an environment a chemical reaction is controlled by intermolecular interactions with the surrounding solvent bath as well as by the intramolecular Hamiltonian. Interaction with the solvent often results in a situation where reactions are controlled by the competition between intramolecular and intermolecular energy relaxation on time scales ranging from femtoseconds to picoseconds.
In the laboratory, state-of-the-art ultrafast lasers and spectroscopic techniques are employed in the observation and control of photoinitiated reactions. These investigations are made possible by the continuing development of tunable femtosecond light sources from the far UV to the near IR, and the development of techniques to precisely control the phase and amplitude of coherent light pulses.
The principle objectives of the research program in our group are:
(1) To develop a detailed understanding of the fundamental processes which govern chemical reaction dynamics in fluid environments. Studies of small molecules permit connections between theoretical calculations and experimental measurements. We are using ultrafast spectroscopy and theoretical modeling to investigate isomerization dynamics in small polyene molecules.
(2) To use "designer" light pulses to control chemical reactions in condensed phases. Bond-selective control of chemical reactions has been a long standing goal of modern chemical physics. Early attempts using selective laser excitation were thwarted by fast intramolecular energy redistribution. Now ultrafast laser pulses, optical pulse shaping, and feedback algorithms have been successfully combined to control bond dissociation reactions in simple isolated molecules. We are using coherent sculpted light pulses to control unimolecular bond dissociation, and isomerization reactions in solution.
(3) To use short pulses to establish synchronization and study enzyme mechanism in complicated biological systems. Our current investigations are concentrating on the bond-cleavage mechanism in B12 dependent enzymes.
Selected Publications
Solvent Dependent Branching Between C-I and C-Br Bond Cleavage Following 266 nm Excitation of CH2BrI, (C. P. Anderson, K. G. Spears, K. R. Wilson, and R. J. Sension), Journal of Chemical Physics, v139, 194307 (2013).
Broadband Ultrafast Transient Absorption of Iron(III) Tetraphenylporphyrin Chloride in the Condensed Phase, (A. S. Rury, and R. J. Sension), Chemical Physics, v422, 220-228 (2013).
Photochemical Ring-Opening and Ground State Relaxation in a-Terpinene with Comparison to Provitamin D3, (B. C. Arruda, J. Peng, B. Smith, K. G. Spears, and R. J. Sension), Journal of Physical Chemistry B, v117(16), 4696-4704 (2013).
Ultrafast Ring-Opening Reactions: A Comparison of a-Terpinene, a-Phellandrene, and 7-Dehydrocholesterol with 1,3-Cyclohexadiene, (B. C. Arruda, B. Smith, K. G. Spears, and R. J. Sension), Faraday Discussion, v163, 159-171 (2013).
Ligand Recruitment and Spin Transitions in the Solid-State Photochemistry of Fe(III)TPPCl, (A. S. Rury, L. E. Goodrich, M. G. I. Galinato, N. Lehnert, and R. J. Sension), Journal of Physical Chemistry A, v116(32), 8321-8333 (2012).
Transient X-ray Fragmentation: Probing a Prototypical Photoinduced Ring Opening, (V. S. Petrovic, M. Siano, J. L. White, N. Berrah, C. Bostedt, J. D. Bozek, D. Broege, M. Chalfin, R. N. Coffee, J. Cryan, L. Fang, J. P. Farrell, L. J. Frasinski, J. M. Glownia, M. Guehr, M. Hoener, D. Holland, J. Kim, J. P. Marangos, T. Martinez, B. K. McFarland, R. S. Minns, S. Miyabe, S. Schorb, R. J. Sension, L. S. Spector, R. Squibb, H. Tao, J. G. Underwood, and P. H. Bucksbaum), Physical Review Letters, v108, 253006 (2012).
Field(s) of Study
- Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics & Biophysics