We present a unified and highly numerically efficient formalism for the simulation of quantum dynamics of complex molecular systems, which takes into account both temperature effects and static disorder. The methodology is based on the thermo-field dynamics formalism, and Gaussian static disorder is included into simulations via auxiliary bosonic operators. This approach, combined with the tensor-train/matrix-product state representation of the thermalized stochastic wave function, is applied to study the effect of dynamic and static disorders in charge-transfer processes in model organic semiconductor chains employing the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger (Holstein-Peierls) model Hamiltonian.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMost photovoltaic (PV) technologies are opaque to maximize visible light absorption. However, see-through solar cells open additional perspectives for PV integration. Looking beyond maximizing visible light harvesting, this work considers the human eye photopic response to optimize a selective near-infrared sensitizer based on a polymethine cyanine structure (VG20-C ) to render dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) fully transparent and colorless.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFermi golden rule and second-order cumulant expansion of the time-dependent density matrix have been used to compute from first principles the rate of intersystem crossing in benzophenone, using minimum-energy geometries and normal modes of vibrations computed at the TDDFT/CAM-B3LYP level. Both approaches yield reliable values of the S decay rate, the latter being almost in quantitative agreement with the results of time-dependent spectroscopic measurements (0.154 ps observed vs 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe structures of single-stranded DNA oligonucleotides from dimeric to hexameric sequences have been thoroughly investigated. Computations performed at the density functional level of theory including dispersion forces and solvation show that single-stranded helices adopt conformations very close to crystallographic B-DNA, with rise coordinates amounting up to 3.3 Å.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSecond-order cumulant expansion of the time dependent reduced density matrix has been employed to evaluate hole hopping rates in pentacene, tetracene, picene, and rubrene homodimers. The cumulant expansion is a full quantum mechanical approach, which enables the use of the whole set of nuclear coordinates in computations and the inclusion of both the effects of the equilibrium position displacements and of normal mode mixing upon hole transfer. The time dependent populations predicted by cumulant approach are in good agreement with those obtained by numerical solution of time dependent Schrödinger equation, even for ultrafast processes, where the Fermi Golden Rule fails.
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