Dr Rebecca Ingle
Lecturer in Physical Chemistry
Dept of Chemistry
Faculty of Maths & Physical Sciences
- Joined UCL
- 6th Jan 2020
Research summary
Absorption of light by a molecule can trigger a wealth of photoinduced processes. Bond breaking, bond formation, large changes in the molecular structure… these are just some of the new realms of chemical and physical processes opened by light. The challenge is capturing and understanding these processes that often occur on the timescale of femtoseconds. They key motivation for my research is developing tools and techniques that allow us to do just this in the field of ultrafast spectroscopy.
Development of ultrafast spectroscopic techniques
One of the challenges of studying light-initiated processes is that they occur in a regime where the Born-Oppenheimer approximation breaks down, making it impossible to separate the molecular electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom. This means that, to successfully map all aspects of a photoinduced process experimentally, the technique of choice must be sensitive to both the electronic and nuclear changes the molecule undergoes.
Ultrafast optical techniques have excellent time-resolution
and sensitivity to the evolution of the valence electronic structure. Of this
family of techniques, multidimensional electronic spectroscopy (2D-ES) makes it
possible to gain unprecedented levels of detail about the energy relaxation
dynamics and behaviour of coherences even in large, complex molecular systems. This
is because with 2D-ES it is possible to frequency-resolve both excitation and
detection signals, avoiding the spectral congestion issues found with more
widely used approaches such as transient electronic absorption (TEA)
spectroscopy.
While the valence electronic structure of a molecule is
dependent on its nuclear configuration, it can be challenging to retrieve
structural information directly from optical experiments. For this,
time-resolved X-ray techniques are better suited. By studying transitions from
the tightly-bound core electrons, element-specific, localised information can
be retrieved on both local changes in electronic structure and structural
information such as bond angles and lengths. A variety of detection methods,
including absorption, emission and photoelectrons, can be used in the X-ray
domain to recover that maximum amount of chemical information.
Applications to complex molecular systems
My motivation for developing the aforementioned experimental
techniques is to make it possible to study a wider range of complex molecular
systems, including porphyrin complexes for photodynamic therapy, and inorganic
and organic compounds for photocatalysis. As well as being excellent candidates
for developing our knowledge of photophysical behaviour, there are key scientific
questions concerning their energy relaxation pathways, and how chemical
substitution and local environment influence these. Understanding this is key
for driving future molecular design for applications.
Combining Experiment and Theory
Developments in excited state electronic structure methods over the last decade have meant that it is possible to directly simulate the observed signals in ultrafast experiments. Using ab initio methods alongside experiments makes it possible to gain deeper insight into the exact mechanisms of energy relaxation and can aid in the interpretation of complex experimental spectra. We perform a variety of such calculations here at UCL and in collaboration with several international groups, particularly for benchmarking and testing new methodological approaches for the simulation of experimental spectra.
Teaching summary
Biography
Rebecca Ingle completed her PhD under the supervision of
Professor Mike Ashfold at the University of Bristol, during which she was award
two fellowships (Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Pre-Doctoral award and
a Bristol-Kyoto fellowship) to work with Professor Toshinori Suzuki at Kyoto University.
In October 2017, she started a postdoctoral research position with Professor
Majed Chergui at EPFL, Switzerland developing techniques for multidimensional spectroscopy
and using X-Ray methods for monitoring the excited-state dynamics of molecules.
In January 2020, she moved to UCL as a Lecturer in Physical Chemistry to
establish her own research group. Her research interests include using a
variety of spectroscopic techniques, including multidimensional optical
spectroscopy and time-resolved X-ray spectroscopy, to understand photoinduced
processes in the solution and gas phase.