Two-dimensional spectroscopy beyond the perturbative limit: the influence of finite pulses and detection modes
Andr\'e Anda, Jared H. Cole

TL;DR
This paper investigates how finite pulse width and amplitude affect two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy signals, comparing heterodyne and fluorescence detection, and provides guidance on experimental conditions and theoretical modeling limitations.
Contribution
It introduces a non-perturbative approach to model 2DES signals considering finite pulses, highlighting differences between detection schemes and delineating parameter regimes for accurate analysis.
Findings
Finite pulse effects significantly influence 2DES signals.
Differences between heterodyne and fluorescence detection are characterized.
Guidelines for experimental conditions and modeling accuracy are provided.
Abstract
Ultra-fast and multi-dimensional spectroscopy gives a powerful looking glass into the dynamics of molecular systems. In particular two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy (2DES) provides a probe of coherence and the flow of energy within quantum systems which is not possible with more conventional techniques. While heterodyne-detected (HD) 2DES is increasingly common, more recently fluorescence-detected (FD) 2DES offers new opportunities, including single-molecule experiments. However in both techniques it can be difficult to unambiguously identify the pathways which dominate the signal. Therefore the use of numerically modelling of 2DES is vitally important, which in turn requires approximating the pulsing scheme to some degree. Here we employ non-pertubative time evolution to investigate the effects of finite pulse width and amplitude on 2DES signals. In doing so we identify key…
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