Strong Slowing Down of Water Reorientation in Mixtures of Water and Tetramethylurea
- 15 February 2008
- journal article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in The Journal of Physical Chemistry A
- Vol. 112 (11) , 2355-2361
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jp077135c
Abstract
We use mid-infrared pump-probe spectroscopy to study the ultrafast dynamics of HDO molecules in mixtures of tetramethylurea (TMU) and water. The composition of the studied solutions ranges from pure water to an equimolar mixture of water and TMU. We find that the vibrational relaxation of the OD-stretching vibration of HDO proceeds via an intermediate level in which the molecule is more strongly hydrogen bonded than in the ground state. As the TMU concentration is increased, the lifetime of the excited state and of the intermediate increase from 1.8 to 5.2 ps and from 0.7 to 2.2 ps, respectively. The orientational relaxation data indicate that the solutions contain two types of water molecules: bulk-like molecules that have the same reorientation time constant as in the pure liquid (taurot = 2.5 ps) and molecules that are strongly immobilized (taurot > 10 ps). The immobilized water molecules turn out to be involved in the solvation of the methyl groups of the tetramethylurea molecule. The fraction of immobilized water molecules grows with increasing TMU concentration, reaching a limiting value of 60% at very high concentrations.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Vibrational relaxation of pure liquid waterChemical Physics Letters, 2006
- Anomalous Slowing Down of the Vibrational Relaxation of Liquid Water upon Nanoscale ConfinementPhysical Review Letters, 2005
- Orientational dynamics of water confined on a nanometer length scale in reverse micellesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 2005
- Ultrafast memory loss and energy redistribution in the hydrogen bond network of liquid H2ONature, 2005
- Dynamics of confined water moleculesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2005
- Reorientational and configurational fluctuations in water observed on molecular length scalesPhysical Review B, 2004
- Watching Hydrogen Bonds Break: A Transient Absorption Study of WaterThe Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 2004
- Hydrogen Bonding and Vibrational Energy Relaxation in Water−Acetonitrile MixturesThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2004
- Temperature dependence of vibrational relaxation in liquid H2OThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 2002
- A Photon Echo Peak Shift Study of Liquid WaterThe Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 2002