화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.108, No.4, 568-577, 2004
Vibronic coupling between soret and higher energy excited states in iron(II) porphyrins: Raman excitation profiles of A(2g) modes in the soret region
Resonance Raman spectra were observed for heme proteins and iron(II) porphyrins including ferrous-CO and ferrous-isocyanide derivatives of cytochrome P450(cam), a synthetic iron(II) porphyrin complex having a thiolate axial ligand, ferrous-isocyanide derivative of myoglobin, and synthetic iron(II) porphyrin complexes having either an imidazole or a sulfide axial ligand. Among them, the former three were found to be a hyperporphyrin, giving red and blue Soret absorption bands, whereas others were normal porphyrins giving a single Soret band. When Raman scattering was excited within the Soret region, an anomalously polarized (ap) Raman line, which was assignable to the upsilon(19) mode belonging to the A(2g) species, was observed at 1537-86 cm(-1) for all these compounds. Both the synthetic iron(II) porphyrins having the imidazole and sulfide ligands also showed another ap Raman line at 1230 cm(-1), which was assigned to upsilon(26) of A(2g) symmetry. Raman excitation profiles of the upsilon(19) and upsilon(26) modes showed a maximum that was displaced from the 0-0 component of the Soret or red Soret band toward higher frequencies by the frequency of the corresponding mode, indicating the 0-1 component. Although Raman lines of these modes were also observed upon excitation at the 0-0 component, they were significantly more intense at the 0-1 component. These results, together with nonadiabatic theories about vibronic contribution to Raman intensity, indicated the presence of vibronic coupling between the Soret (or red Soret) excited state and some other electronic excited state(s) located in the blue of the Soret band. The present study hence demonstrates that lower occupied orbitals other than those described in the ordinary four-orbital model and its extended form, which is applicable to the hyperporphyrins, contribute to the Soret (or red Soret) excited states.