Manipulating Impulsive Stimulated Raman Spectroscopy
with a Chirped Probe Pulse
Posted on 2017-02-08 - 00:00
Photophysical
and photochemical processes are often dominated by
molecular vibrations in various electronic states. Dissecting the
corresponding, often overlapping, spectroscopic signals from different
electronic states is a challenge hampering their interpretation. Here
we address impulsive stimulated Raman spectroscopy (ISRS), a powerful
technique able to coherently stimulate and record Raman-active modes
using broadband pulses. Using a quantum-mechanical treatment of the
ISRS process, we show the mode-specific way the various spectral components
of the broadband probe contribute to the signal generated at a given
wavelength. We experimentally demonstrate how to manipulate the signal
by varying the probe chirp and the phase-matching across the sample,
thereby affecting the relative phase between the various contributions
to the signal. These novel control knobs allow us to selectively enhance
desired vibrational features and distinguish spectral components arising
from different excited states.