Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.116, No.46, 11228-11240, 2012
Non-Resonant Dynamic Stark Control at a Conical Intersection: The Photodissociation of Ammonia
Control of the photodissociation of ammonia, by the nonresonant dynamic Stark effect, has been studied theoretically by the numerically exact propagation. of wavepackets on ab initio potential energy surfaces. An assessment of the feasibility of controlling the proportion of the wavepacket which dissociates to produce ground or electronically excited state NH2 fragments, mediated by a conical intersection, has been made by use of a simple two-dimensional, two-state model. It was found that modest control was possible for nonresonant pulses applied during and after excitation, and that the control was caused not by alteration of the position or nature of the conical intersection but by modification of the energy surfaces around the Franck-Condon region. This is made possible by the predissociative nature of the mechanism for hydrogen ejection. The control effect is frequency independent but dependent on pulse, i.e., electric field, strength, indicating that it is indeed due to the Stark effect. :Analysis of the control is, however, complicated by the presence of vibrational effects which can come into play if the control pulse frequency is not carefully chosen By systematically varying the excitation energy, it was also found that the capacity for control is Only significant at low energies.