One of the most important areas of application for equation-of-motion coupled-cluster (EOM-CC) theory is the prediction, simulation, and analysis of various types of electronic spectra. In this work, the EOM-CC method for ionized states, known as EOM-IP-CC, is applied to the closely lying and coupled pair of states of the ozone cation─ and ─using highly accurate treatments including up to the full single, double, triple, and quadruple excitations (EOM-IP-CCSDTQ). Combined with a venerable and powerful method for calculating vibronic spectra from the Hamiltonian produced by EOM-IP-CC calculations, the simulations yield a spectrum that is in good agreement with the photoelectron spectrum of ozone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA computational methodology, founded on chemical concepts, is presented for interpreting the role of nuclear motion in the electron transport through single-molecule junctions (SMJ) using many-electron ab initio quantum chemical calculations. Within this approach the many-electron states of the system, computed at the SOS-ADC(2) level, are followed along the individual normal modes of the encapsulated molecules. The inspection of the changes in the partial charge distribution of the many-electron states allows the quantification of the electron transport and the estimation of transmission probabilities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe projected atomic orbital (PAO) technique is presented for the construction of virtual orbital spaces in projection-based embedding (PbE) applications. The proposed straightforward procedure produces a set of virtual orbitals that are used in the final, high-level calculation of the embedded active subsystem. The PAO scheme is demonstrated on intermolecular potentials of bimolecular complexes in ground and excited states, including Rydberg excitations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe electronic excitations of conformationally constrained bithiophene cage systems as previously investigated by Lewis et al. (J. Am.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile Coupled-Cluster methods have been proven to provide an accurate description of excited electronic states, the scaling of the computational costs with the system size limits the degree for which these methods can be applied. In this work different aspects of fragment-based approaches are studied on noncovalently bound molecular complexes with interacting chromophores of the fragments, such as π-stacked nucleobases. The interaction of the fragments is considered at two distinct steps.
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