Hydrogen bonding and transfer in the excited state; Vol.1 (Chichester, 2011). - ОГЛАВЛЕНИЕ / CONTENTS
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ОбложкаHydrogen bonding and transfer in the excited state. Vol.1 / ed. by Ke-Li Han, Guang-Jiu Zhao. - Chichester: Wiley, 2011. - xl, 461 p. : ill. - Incl. bibl. ref. - ISBN 978-0-470-66677-7
 

Оглавление / Contents
 
Editors' Biographies ........................................... xv
Reviewer Comments ............................................ xvii
List of Contributors ....................................... xxxiii
Preface ..................................................... xxxix

Volume I

1  Vibrational Dynamics of the Double Hydrogen Bonds in
   Nucleic Acid Base Pairs ...................................... 1
   Yun-an Yan and Oliver Kühn
   1.1  Introduction ............................................ 1
   1.2  Hydrogen Bonding and Nonlinear Infrared Spectroscopy .... 3
   1.3  Correlated Vibrational Dynamics of an Adenine-Uracil
        Derivative in Solution .................................. 9
   1.4  Conclusion ............................................. 22
   Acknowledgement ............................................. 23
   Appendix .................................................... 23
   References .................................................. 24

2  Vibrational Energy Relaxation Dynamics of XH Stretching
   Vibrations of Aromatic Molecules in the Electronic Excited
   State ....................................................... 29
   Takayuki Ebata
   2.1  Introduction ........................................... 29
   2.2  IR Spectra of 2-Naphthol and its H-Bonded Clusters in
        S1 ..................................................... 30
   2.3  VER Dynamics of Bare 2-Naphthol ........................ 31
   2.4  VER Dynamics of H-Bonded Clusters of 2-Naphfhol ........ 31
   2.5  Comparison of the eis → trans Barrier Height Between
        S0 and S1 .............................................. 36
   2.6  Conclusion ............................................. 37
   References .................................................. 37

3  Hydrogen Bond Basicity in the Excited State: Concept and
   Applications ................................................ 39
   Attila Demeter
   3.1  Introduction ........................................... 39
   3.2  Experiment ............................................. 40
   3.1  Results and Discussion ................................. 41
   3.4  Summary ................................................ 76
   Acknowledgements ............................................ 77
   References .................................................. 77

4  Solute-Solvent Hydrogen Bond Formation in the Excited
   State. Experimental and Theoretical Evidence ................ 79
   Iulia Matei, Sorana Ionescu and Mihaela Hillebrand
   4.1  Introduction ........................................... 79
   4.2  The Prerequisite Conditions for Hydrogen Bond
        Formation .............................................. 80
   4.3  Diagnosis Criteria and Quantitative Treatment of
        Hydrogen Bonds ......................................... 82
   4.4  Design of the Experiments .............................. 98
   4.5  Theoretical Modelling of the H-Bonds .................. 104
   4.6  Conclusions ........................................... 117
   References ................................................. 119

5  Electronic-Excited-State Structures and Properties of
   Hydrated DNA Bases and Base Pairs .......................... 125
   Manoj K. Shukla and Jerzy Leszczynski
   5.1  Introduction .......................................... 125
   5.2  Ground-State Structures of Nucleic Acid Bases and
        Base Pairs ............................................ 128
   5.3  Excited-State Structures of Nucleic Acid Bases ........ 129
   5.4  Excited States of Base Pairs .......................... 138
   5.5  Excited-State Dynamics and Non-Radiative Decays ....... 142
   5.6  Conclusions ........................................... 143
   Acknowledgements ........................................... 143
   References ................................................. 144

6  Insight from Singlet into Triplet Excited-State Hydrogen
   Bonding Dynamics in Solution ............................... 149
   Guang-Jiu Zhao and Ke-Li Han
   6.1  Introduction .......................................... 149
   6.2  Theoretical Methods ................................... 151
   6.3  Results and Discussion ................................ 151
   6.4  Conclusion ............................................ 156
   Acknowledgements ........................................... 156
   References ................................................. 156

7  Probing Dynamic Heterogeneity in Nanoconfined Systems:
   the Femtosecond Excitation Wavelength Dependence and
   Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy ...................... 159
   Shantanu Dey, Ujjwal Mandal, Aniruddha Adhikari, Subhadip
   Ghosh and Kankan Bhattacharyya
   7.1  Introduction .......................................... 159
   7.2  Solvation Dynamics in Nanoconfined Systems ............ 160
   7.3  Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET):
        Dependence ............................................ 166
   7.4  Excited-State Proton Transfer (ESPT) .................. 167
   7.5  Diffusion of Organic Dyes by Fluorescence
        Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS) ........................ 170
   7.6  Conclusions ........................................... 172
   Acknowledgements ........................................... 172
   References ................................................. 172

8  Fluorescence Studies of the Hydrogen Bonding of Excited-
   State Molecules Within Supramolecular Host-Guest
   Inclusion Complexes ........................................ 175
   Brian D. Wagner
   8.1  Introduction .......................................... 175
   8.2  Hydrogen Bonding Involving Excited States of
        Fluorescent Probes in Solution ........................ 177
   8.3  Hydrogen Bonding of Excited States of Included
        Guests ................................................ 180
   8.4  Conclusions ........................................... 187
   References ................................................. 188

9  Hydrogen Bonding on Photoexcitation ........................ 193
   Debarati Dey, Manas Kumar Sarangi and Samita Basu
   9.1  Introduction .......................................... 193
   9.2  Intermolecular Excited-State Hydrogen Bonding ......... 194
   9.3  Concluding Remarks .................................... 202
   References ................................................. 202

10 Effect of Intramolecular H-Bond-Type Interactions on the
   Photochemistry of Aza-Stilbene-Like Molecules .............. 205
   Giampiero Bartocci, Ugo Mazzucato and Anna Spalletti
   10.1 Introduction .......................................... 205
   10.2 Control of the Conformational Equilibria in the
        Ground State .......................................... 206
   10.3 Control of Radiative and Reactive Relaxation .......... 210
   10.4 Unusual Adiabatic Photoisomerization in the Ј → Z
        Direction ............................................. 211
   References ................................................. 214

11 Hydrogen Bonding Barrier-Crossing Dynamics at
   Biomimicking Surfaces ...................................... 217
   Rajib Kumar Mitra, Pramod Kumar Verma, Debapriya Banerjee
   and Samir Kumar Pal
   11.1 Introduction .......................................... 217
   11.2 Materials and Methods ................................. 222
   11.3 Results and Discussion ................................ 237
   11.4 Conclusion ............................................ 259
   Acknowledgements ........................................... 260
   References ................................................. 260

12 Intermolecular Hydrogen Bonding in the Fluorescence
   Excited State of Organic Luminophores Containing Both
   Carbonyl and Amino Groups .................................. 269
   Ilijana Timcheva and Peter Nikolov
   12.1 Introduction .......................................... 269
   12.2 Experimental .......................................... 270
   12.3 Results and Discussion ................................ 270
   12.4 Conclusion ............................................ 284
   References ................................................. 284

13 Hydrogen-Bonding Effects on Excited States of Para-
   Hydroxyphenacyl Compounds .................................. 287
   David Lee Phillips
   13.1 Introduction .......................................... 287
   13.2 Experimental and Computational Methods ................ 288
   13.3 Hydrogen-Bonding Effects on the Excited States of
        Selected Phenacyl Model Compounds ..................... 289
   13.4 Hydrogen-Bonding Effects on the Excited States of
        Selected Fara-Hydroxyphenacyl Ester Phototriggers
        and the Role of Water in the Deprotection and
        Subsequent Reactions .................................. 302
   References ................................................. 310

14 Hydrogen-Bonding Effects on Intramolecular Charge
   Transfer ................................................... 313
   Govindarajan Krishnamoorthy
   14.1 Introduction .......................................... 313
   14.2 Polarity and Viscosity ................................ 317
   14.3 Hydrogen Bonding with the Donor Moiety ................ 318
   14.4 Hydrogen Bonding with the Acceptor Moiety ............. 320
   14.5 Conclusion ............................................ 327
   Acknowledgements ........................................... 327
   References ................................................. 327

15 Chemical Dynamics in Room-Temperature Ionic Liquids: the
   Role of Hydrogen Bonding ................................... 331
   Souravi Sarkar, Rajib Pramanik and Nilmoni Sarkar
   15.1 Photoinduced Electron Transfer in a Room-Temperature
        Ionic Liquid .......................................... 331
   15.2 Dynamics of Solvent Relaxation in Room-Temperature
        Ionic Liquids Containing Mixed Solvents ............... 335
   Acknowledgements ........................................... 339
   References ................................................. 339

16 Vibrational Spectroscopy for Studying Hydrogen Bonding
   in Imidazolium Ionic Liquids and their Mixtures with
   Cosolvents ................................................. 341
   Johannes Kiefer
   16.1 Introduction .......................................... 341
   16.2 Experimental Approaches ............................... 342
   16.3 Hydrogen Bonding in Ionic Liquids ..................... 345
   16.4 Potential, Challenges and Future Applications ......... 349
   Acknowledgements ........................................... 349
   References ................................................. 350

17 Intramolecular H-Bond Formation Mediated De-Excitation of
   Curcuminoids: a Time-Resolved Fluorescence Study ........... 353
   Luca Nardo, Alessandra Andreoni and Hanne Hjorth Tønnesen
   17.1 Introduction .......................................... 353
   17.2 Experimental Set-Up and Data Analysis Methods ......... 363
   17.3 Results and Discussion ................................ 366
   17.4 Conclusions ........................................... 373
   References ................................................. 373

18 Hydrogen Bonds of Protein-Bound Water Molecules in
   Rhodopsins ................................................. 377
   Hideki Kandori
   18.1 Introduction .......................................... 377
   18.2 Detection of Water Under Strongly Hydrogen-Bonded
        Conditions in Bacteriorhodopsin ....................... 379
   18.3 Hydration Switch Model as a Proton Transfer
        Mechanism in the Schiff Base Region of
        Bacteriorhodopsin ..................................... 380
   18.4 Time-Resolved IR Study of Water Structural Changes
        in Bacteriorhodopsin at Room Temperature .............. 382
   18.5 Role of the Water Hydrogen Bond in a Chloride-Ion
        Pump .................................................. 384
   18.6 Strongly Hydrogen-Bonded Water Molecules and
        Functional Correlation with the Proton-Pump
        Activity .............................................. 386
   18.7 Conclusion ............................................ 388
   Acknowledgements ........................................... 388
   References ................................................. 389

19 Ground- and Excited-State Hydrogen Bonding in the
   Diazaromatic Betacarboline Derivatives ..................... 393
   Carmen Carmona, Manuel Balón, María Asunción Muñoz,
   Antonio Sánchez-Coronilla, José Hidalgo and Emilio
   García-Fernández
   19.1 Introduction .......................................... 393
   19.2 MBC-HFIP and MHN-HFIP ................................. 396
   19.3 BCA-HFIP .............................................. 403
   19.4 ВС-НИР ................................................ 406
   19.5 ВС-ВС and BC-PY ....................................... 409
   19.6 Concluding Remarks .................................... 415
   Acknowledgements ........................................... 416
   References ................................................. 416

20 Effect of H-bonding on the Photophysical Behaviour of
   Coumarin Dyes .............................................. 419
   Sukhendu Nath, Manoj Kumbhakar and Haridas Pal
   20.1 Introduction .......................................... 419
   20.2 Effect of Intermolecular H-bonding .................... 421
   20.3 Effect of Intramolecular H-bonding on ICT to TICT
        Conversion ............................................ 426
   20.4 Summary ............................................... 429
   References ................................................. 430

21 Role of Hydrogen Bonds in Photosynthetic Water Splitting ... 433
   Gemot Renger
   21.1 Introduction .......................................... 433
   21.2 Photosystem II: Overall Reaction Pattern and
        Cofactor Arrangement .................................. 434
   21.3 Hydrogen Bonds and the Thermal Stability of PS II ..... 436
   21.4 Reaction Sequences of PS II and the Role of Hydrogen
        Bonds ................................................. 437
   21.5 Concluding Remarks and Future Perspectives ............ 452
   Acknowledgements ........................................... 452
   References ................................................. 452


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