We show that accurate oscillator strengths can be obtained from adiabatic connection (AC) approaches based on the extended random phase approximation (ERPA) combined with multireference (complete active space, CAS) wave functions. The oscillator strengths calculated using the perturbation-corrected ERPA transition density matrices, proposed in this work, and the excitation energies calculated with recently introduced AC correlation energy methods, AC0 and AC0D, compete with accuracy in the perturbational CASPT2 approach and require less computational effort. AC0 and AC0D methods scale more favorably with the number of active orbitals than multiconfigurational perturbation approaches like CASPT2 and NEVPT2 thanks to their dependence on reduced density matrices up to the order of 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe new generation of proposed light-emitting molecules for organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) has raised considerable research interest due to its exceptional feature─a negative singlet-triplet (ST) gap violating Hund's multiplicity rule in the excited S and T states. We investigate the role of spin polarization in the mechanism of ST gap inversion. Spin polarization is associated with doubly excited determinants of certain types, whose presence in the wave function expansion favors the energy of the singlet state more than that of the triplet.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiarylethenes (DAEs), promising photochromic molecular switches, undergo pericyclic reactions upon ultraviolet or visible light illumination. For this reason, most studies on DAEs employ UV-vis spectroscopies. However, also their infrared (IR) spectra are valuable, in particular, for understanding the vibrational dynamics which accompanies the relevant photoreactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStrong electron correlation can be captured with multireference wave function methods, but an accurate description of the electronic structure requires accounting for the dynamic correlation, which they miss. In this work, a new approach for the correlation energy based on the adiabatic connection (AC) is proposed. The AC method accounts for terms up to order in the coupling constant, and it is size-consistent and free from instabilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe adiabatic connection (AC) theory offers an alternative to the perturbation theory methods for computing correlation energy in the multireference wavefunction framework. We show that the AC correlation energy formula can be expressed in terms of the density linear response function as a sum of components related to positive and negative parts of the transition energy spectrum. Consequently, generalization of the adiabatic connection fluctuation-dissipation theory to electronically excited states is obtained.
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