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Mechanisms for Ultrafast Nonradiative Relaxation in Electronically Excited Eumelanin Constituents

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2008

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Biophysical Society
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Meng, Sheng, and Efthimios Kaxiras. 2008. “Mechanisms for Ultrafast Nonradiative Relaxation in Electronically Excited Eumelanin Constituents.” Biophysical Journal 95 (9): 4396–4402. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.108.135756.

Abstract

We investigate the relaxation dynamics of melanin model constituents including monomers, dimers, and tetramers, upon excitation, using state-of-the-art, time-dependent, density functional theory calculations. The results explain the ability of these molecules to transform photon energy into thermal energy in a remarkably short timescale of similar to 100 fs. We find that after electronic excitation by light absorption, ultrafast energy conversion takes place through two novel mechanisms: proton transfer on a timescale of 110 fs and state mixing upon oligomerization on a timescale of < 50 fs. These results are in good agreement with available experiments and help elucidate melanin's role in photoprotection against ultraviolet radiation.

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