We report multimode vibronic coupling of the energetically low-lying electronic states of phenol and pentafluorophenol in this article. First principles nuclear dynamics calculations are carried out to elucidate the optical absorption spectrum of both of the molecules. This is motivated by the recent experimental measurements [S. Karmakar et al., J. Chem. Phys. 142, 184303 (2015)] on these systems. Diabatic vibronic coupling models are developed with the aid of adiabatic electronic energies calculated ab initio by the equation of motion coupled cluster quantum chemistry method. A nuclear dynamics study on the constructed electronic states is carried out by both the time-independent and time-dependent quantum mechanical methods. It is found that the nature of low-energy πσ* transition changes, and in pentafluorophenol the energy of the first two πσ* states, is lowered by about half an eV (vertically, relative to those in phenol), and they become energetically close to the optically bright first excited ππ* (S) state. This results in strong vibronic coupling and multiple multi-state conical intersections among the ππ* and πσ* electronic states of pentafluorophenol. The impact of associated nonadiabatic effects on the vibronic structure and dynamics of the ππ* state is examined at length. The structured vibronic band of phenol becomes structureless in pentafluorophenol. The theoretical results are found to be in good accord with the experimental finding at both high energy resolution and low energy resolution.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.5015986DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

vibronic coupling
12
electronic states
12
phenol pentafluorophenol
8
nuclear dynamics
8
ππ* state
8
energy resolution
8
pentafluorophenol
5
vibronic
5
photophysics phenol
4
pentafluorophenol role
4

Similar Publications

Ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) is essential for DNA synthesis and repair in all living organisms. The mechanism of RNR requires long-range radical transport through a proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) pathway spanning two different protein subunits. Herein, the direct PCET reaction between the interfacial tyrosine residues, Y356 and Y731, is investigated with a vibronically nonadiabatic theory that treats the transferring proton and all electrons quantum mechanically.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We here simulate in the gas phase the population dynamics of guanine/cytosine (GC) and cytosine/guanine (CG) stacked dimers in B-DNA and A-DNA arrangement, following excitation in the lowest-energy band, and considering the four lowest-energy ππ* bright excited states, the three lowest-energy π* states, and the G → C charge-transfer (CT) state. We resort to a generalized Linear Vibronic Coupling (LVC) model parametrized with time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) computations, exploiting a fragment-based diabatization and we run nonadiabatic quantum dynamical simulations with the multilayer version of the Multiconfigurational Time-Dependent Hartree (ML-MCTDH) approach. G → C CT results in a major decay process for GC in B-DNA but less in A-DNA arrangement, where also the population transfer to the lowest-energy excited state localized on C is an important intermonomer process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The linear vibronic coupling (LVC) model is an approach for approximating how a molecular Hamiltonian changes in response to small changes in molecular geometry. The LVC framework thus has the ability to approximate molecular Hamiltonians at low computational expense but with quality approaching multiconfigurational calculations, when the change in geometry compared to the reference calculation used to parametrize it is small. Here, we show how the LVC approach can be used to project approximate spin Hamiltonians of a solvated lanthanide complex along a room-temperature molecular dynamics trajectory.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The cyano-cyclopentadiene molecule (CN-CH) has attracted significant interest since its detection in the interstellar medium, but the radical (CN-CH) and anionic (CN-CH) forms of cyano-cyclopentadiene have not been studied. The cyano-cyclopentadienyl radical (CN-Cp) has a strong dipole moment, rendering it an ideal system for vibrational and rotational spectroscopy. We report an investigation of the cryogenically cooled cyano-cyclopentadienide anion (CN-Cp) using high-resolution photoelectron imaging, photodetachment spectroscopy, and resonant photoelectron imaging.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!