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Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) is an important enzyme cofactor with emissive properties that allow it to be used in fluorescence microscopies to study cell metabolism. Its oxidized form NAD, on the other hand, is considered to produce negligible fluorescence. In this contribution, we describe the photophysics of the isolated nicotinamidic system in both its reduced and oxidized states. This was achieved through the study of model molecules that do not carry the adenine nucleotide since its absorbance would overlap with the absorption spectrum of the nicotinamidic chromophores. We studied three model molecules: nicotinamide (niacinamide, an oxidized form without nitrogen substitution), the oxidized chromophore 1-benzyl-3-carbamoyl-pyridinium bromide (NBzOx), and its reduced form 1-benzyl-1,4-dihydronicotinamide (NBz). For a full understanding of the dynamics, we performed both femtosecond-resolved emission and transient absorption experiments. The oxidized systems, nicotinamide and NBzOx, have similar photophysics, where the originally excited bright state decays on an ultrafast timescale of less than 400 fs. The depopulation of this state is followed by excited-state positive absorption signals, which evolve in two timescales: the first one is from 1 to a few picoseconds and is followed by a second decaying component of 480 ps for nicotinamide in water and of 80-90 ps for nicotinamide in methanol and NBzOx in aqueous solution. The long decay times are assigned as the S lifetimes populated from the original higher-lying bright singlet, where this state is nonemissive but can be detected by transient absorption. While for NBzOx in aqueous solution and for nicotinamide in methanol, the S signal decays to the solvent-only level, for the aqueous solutions of nicotinamide, a small transient absorption signal remains after the 480 ps decay. This residual signal was assigned to a small population of triplet states formed during the slower S decay for nicotinamide in water. The experimental results were complemented by XMS-CASPT2 calculations, which reveal that in the oxidized forms, the rapid evolution of the initial π-π* state is due to a direct crossing with lower-energy dark -π* singlet states. This coincides with the experimental observation of long-lived nonemissive states (80 to 480 ps depending on the system). On the other hand, the reduced model compound NBz has a long-lived emissive π-π* S state, which decays with a 510 ps time constant, similarly to the parent compound NADH. This is consistent with the XMS-CASPT2 calculations, which show that for the reduced chromophore, the dark states lie at higher energies than the bright π-π* S state.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.3c03246 | DOI Listing |
ACS Nano
September 2025
College of Materials Science and Engineering, Fuzhou University, Fuzhou 350108, China.
Polymorphic two-dimensional (2D) transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDCs) exhibit diverse properties for optoelectronic applications. Here, utilizing phase-engineered MoTe as a prototypical platform, we comprehensively explored its ultrafast and nonlinear optical properties to complete the fundamental framework of phase-dependent optical phenomena in 2D TMDCs. Starting with the phase-selective synthesis of 2H- and 1T'-MoTe with tailored thicknesses, we revealed their distinct photocarrier relaxation mechanisms using intensive power-/temperature-/thickness-dependent transient absorption spectra (TAS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
August 2025
Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan National Laboratory for Optoelectronics and School of Physics, Wuhan 430074, China.
We propose a scheme for retrieving the ultrafast valley polarization (VP) dynamics in two-dimensional hexagonal materials via attosecond circular dichroism (CD) transient absorption spectroscopy. This approach builds on the CD transition between the first and higher conduction bands induced by the circularly polarized probe pulses. The population imbalance at nonequivalent valleys in the first conduction band is proportionally mapped onto the difference in absorption coefficients of two probe pulses with opposite helicities, supporting an unprecedented quantitative retrieval of the corresponding VP dynamics with subfemtosecond time resolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Soc Rev
September 2025
State Key Laboratory of Crystal Materials, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Shandong University, Jinan 250100, China.
Understanding the excited-state dynamics of atomically precise coinage metal nanoclusters (CMNCs) is pivotal for elucidating their photoluminescence (PL) mechanisms and rationally tuning emission properties-particularly in the near-infrared (NIR) region, where CMNC-based nanomaterials have tremendous potential for biomedical and optoelectronic applications. This review presents a systematic and comprehensive account of recent advances in investigating the excited-state dynamics and PL mechanisms of NIR-emitting CMNCs with atomic precision, leveraging the synergistic integration of time-resolved spectroscopy and time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations. Distinct from previous reviews that offer a broad survey of CMNC properties, the present review focuses specifically on intrinsic factors, highlighting molecular vibrational features and electronic structure modulation as key determinants of NIR emission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem Lett
September 2025
Department of Chemistry, Oregon State University, 153 Gilbert Hall, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, United States.
Carbon dots (CDs) represent a new class of nontoxic and sustainable nanomaterials with increasing applications. Among them, bright and large Stokes-shift CDs are highly desirable for display and imaging, yet the emission mechanisms remain unclear. We obtained structural signatures for the recently engineered green and red CDs by ground-state femtosecond stimulated Raman spectroscopy (FSRS), then synthesized orange CDs with similar size but much higher nitrogen dopants than red CDs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem Lett
September 2025
School of Chemistry, University of Bristol, Cantock's Close, Bristol BS8 1TS, U.K.
The electron-deficient oxidant 2,3-dichloro-5,6-dicyano-1,4-benzoquinone (DDQ) has recently emerged as a promising visible-light photoredox catalyst. However, its excited-state behavior remains poorly understood. Here, we investigate the ultrafast dynamics of photoexcited DDQ in acetonitrile using transient electronic and infrared absorption spectroscopy, supported by quantum chemical calculations.
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