Web Release Date: November 14,
Effect of Organic Surfactant on Femtosecond Solvation Dynamics at the Air-Water Interface
Department of Chemistry, Columbia University, New York, New York 10027
Received: July 18, 2000
In Final Form: October 6, 2000
Abstract:
Solvation dynamics at an air-water interface covered with a Langmuir monolayer of a neutral surfactant
stearic acid CH3(CH2)16COOH was measured using femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy of a molecular
probe, coumarin 314. The second harmonic generation was used as a surface-specific ultrafast probe. The
results are compared with the solvation dynamics measured for the same probe molecule at the air-water
interface without the surfactant. The overall solvation time in the presence of the fatty acid monolayer (
s =
400 ± 60 fs) differs from that at the air-water interface, where two components
1 = 250 ± 60 fs and
2 =
1250 ± 80 fs were obtained, with an amplitude weighted average solvation time of
s = 850 ± 70 fs. These
results are in agreement with bulk studies of coumarins in water. The different solvation dynamics at the
surfactant modified interface is attributed to rearrangement of the hydrogen bonding network of water molecules
near the interface due to interactions with the hydrophilic carboxyl group of the surfactant.
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