To unravel the connection between the non-equilibrium and equilibrium solvation dynamics of tryptophan: success and failure of the linear response theory of fluorescence Stokes shift†
Abstract
The connections between the non-equilibrium solvation dynamics upon optical transitions and the system's equilibrium fluctuations are explored in aqueous liquid. Linear response theory correlates time-dependent fluorescence with the equilibrium time correlation functions. In the previous work [T. Li, J. Chem. Theory Comput., 2017, 13, 1867], Stokes shift was explicitly decomposed into the contributions of various order time correlation functions on the excited state surface. Gaussian fluctuations of the solute–solvent interactions validate linear response theory. Correspondingly, the deviation of the Gaussian statistics causes the inefficiency of linear response evaluation. The above mechanism is thoroughly tested in this study. By employing molecular simulations, multiple non-equilibrium processes, not necessarily initiated from the ground state equilibrium minimum, were examined for tryptophan. Both the success and failure of linear response theory are found for this simple system and the mechanism is analyzed. These observations, assisted by the width dynamics, the initial state linear response approach, and the variation of the solvation structures, integrally verify the virtue of the excited state Gaussian statistics on the dynamics of Stokes shift.