Using Wave-Packet Interferometry to Monitor the External Vibrational Control of Electronic Excitation Transfer
Jason D. Biggs, Jeffrey A. Cina

TL;DR
This paper explores using wave-packet interferometry to monitor and control electronic energy transfer in molecular dimers through vibrational coherences and nonlinear optical techniques.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework for using nonlinear wave-packet interferometry to observe vibrationally controlled electronic energy transfer in dimers.
Findings
Theoretical expression for control-dependent nl-WPI signal derived.
Numerical calculations demonstrate the feasibility of monitoring nuclear dynamics.
Control pulses influence electronic excitation transfer via vibrational coherences.
Abstract
We investigate the control of electronic energy transfer in molecular dimers through the preparation of specific vibrational coherences prior to electronic excitation, and its observation by nonlinear wave-packet interferometry. Laser-driven coherent nuclear motion can affect the instantaneous resonance between site-excited electronic states and thereby influence short-time electronic excitation transfer (EET). We first illustrate this control mechanism with calculations on a dimer whose constituent monomers undergo harmonic vibrations. We then consider the use of nonlinear wave-packet interferometry (nl-WPI) experiments to monitor the nuclear dynamics accompanying EET in general dimer complexes following impulsive vibrational excitation by a sub-resonant control pulse (or control pulse sequence). In measurements of this kind, two pairs of polarized phase-related femtosecond pulses…
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