Research Areas - (14) 2D Electronic / IR Spectroscopy

Full path: Chemistry > Physical Chemistry > Ultrafast Spectroscopy > 2D Electronic / IR Spectroscopy

Department(s)/lab(s): Physics (Cavendish Laboratory) | Rao Group - Optoelectronics @ Cambridge
Summary:

Rao's group uses ultrafast (sub-20 fs) transient absorption and vibronic spectroscopy to study quantum-coherent energy and charge transfer processes in molecular and nanoscale semiconductor systems, most notably the quantum-coherent mechanism of singlet exciton fission, with applications to next-generation photovoltaics.

Department(s)/lab(s): Chemistry | Scholes Group @ Princeton
Summary:

Scholes uses multidimensional ultrafast and coherence spectroscopies to probe wavepacket dynamics and quantum-mechanical phenomena in photosynthetic light-harvesting complexes, cavity QED, and photo-activated chemistry, including his group's resolution of a decade-long controversy over long-lived coherent coupling in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson complex. His current work extends coherence spectroscopy to quantum information science and photobiomodulation, squarely fitting the fundamental light-physics/quantum-optics side of the filter.

Department(s)/lab(s): Chemistry | Tempelaar Team @ Northwestern
Summary:

Tempelaar develops theory and simulation methods (surface-hopping and vibronic exciton models) for two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy, explaining how vibronic coupling sustains excitonic coherence in photosynthetic light-harvesting complexes such as the Fenna-Matthews-Olson complex and LH2, and extending these ideas to singlet fission and organic-semiconductor aggregates. He is a faculty affiliate of Northwestern's Institute for Quantum Information Research and Engineering (INQUIRE).

Department(s)/lab(s): Chemistry | Tokmakoff Group @ UChicago
Summary:

Uses ultrafast multidimensional spectroscopy to study structural dynamics of biomolecules. Directions: (1) 2D IR spectroscopy of protein folding, water dynamics, and membrane systems with sub-100-fs time resolution; (2) single-molecule FRET for resolving conformational heterogeneity in proteins and nucleic acids; (3) development of ultrafast mid-IR laser sources and pulse shaping for 2D spectroscopy. Resolves dynamics inaccessible to other methods.