November 10, 2016
Journal Article

Local environment and interactions of liquid and solid interfaces revealed by spectral line shape of surface selective nonlinear vibrational probe

Abstract

Vibrational spectral lineshape contains important detailed information of molecular vibration and reports its specific interactions and couplings to its local environment. In this work, recently developed sub-1 cm-1 high-resolution broadband sum frequency generation vibrational spectroscopy (HR-BB-SFG-VS) was used to measure the -C=N stretch vibration in the 4-n-octyl-4’-cyanobiphenyl (8CB) Langmuir or Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) monolayer as a unique vibrational probe, and the spectral lineshape analysis revealed the local environment and interactions at the air/water, air/glass, air/calcium fluoride and air/-quartz interfaces for the first time. The 8CB Langmuir or LB film is uniform and the vibrational spectral lineshape of its -C=N group has been well characterized, making it a good choice as the surface vibrational probe. Lineshape analysis of the 8CB -C=N stretch SFG vibrational spectra suggests the coherent vibrational dynamics and the structural and dynamic inhomogeneity of the -C=N group at each interface are uniquely different. In addition, it is also found that there are significantly different roles for water molecules in the LB films on different substrate surfaces. These results demonstrated the novel capabilities of the surface nonlinear spectroscopy in characterization and in understanding the specific structures and chemical interactions at the liquid and solid interfaces in general.

Revised: January 17, 2017 | Published: November 10, 2016

Citation

Chen S., F. Li, Z.A. Chase, W. Gan, and H. Wang. 2016. Local environment and interactions of liquid and solid interfaces revealed by spectral line shape of surface selective nonlinear vibrational probe. Journal of Physical Chemistry C 120, no. 44:25511-25518. PNNL-SA-120513. doi:10.1021/acs.jpcc.6b10215