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      Intermolecular torsional motion of a π-aggregated dimer probed by two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy

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      The Journal of Chemical Physics
      AIP Publishing

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          Most cited references43

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          Two-dimensional femtosecond spectroscopy.

          The simplest two-dimensional (2D) spectra show how excitation with one (variable) frequency affects the spectrum at all other frequencies, thus revealing the molecular connections between transitions. Femtosecond 2D Fourier transform (2D FT) spectra are more flexible and share some of the remarkable properties of their conceptual parent, 2D FT nuclear magnetic resonance. When 2D FT spectra are experimentally separated into real absorptive and imaginary refractive parts, the time resolution and frequency resolution can both reach the uncertainty limit set for each resonance by the sample itself. Coherent four-level contributions to the signal provide new molecular phase information, such as relative signs of transition dipoles. The nonlinear response can be picked apart by selecting a single coherence pathway (e.g., specifying the relative signs of energy level difference frequencies during different time intervals as in the photon echo). Because molecules are frozen on the femtosecond timescale, femtosecond 2D FT experiments can separate a distribution of instantaneous molecular environments and intramolecular geometries as inhomogeneous broadening. This review provides an introduction to two-dimensional Fourier transform experiments exploiting second- and third-order vibrational and electronic nonlinearities.
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            ENERGY TRANSFER MECHANISMS AND THE MOLECULAR EXCITON MODEL FOR MOLECULAR AGGREGATES.

            M Kasha (1963)
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              Coherent two-dimensional optical spectroscopy.

              M. Cho (2008)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Journal of Chemical Physics
                The Journal of Chemical Physics
                AIP Publishing
                0021-9606
                1089-7690
                January 14 2012
                January 14 2012
                : 136
                : 2
                : 024109
                Article
                10.1063/1.3674993
                d7346eee-061c-4f83-8590-15e4a3149b62
                © 2012
                History

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