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      Electronic π‐to‐π* Excitations of Rhodamine Dyes Exhibit a Time‐Dependent Kohn–Sham Theory “Cyanine Problem”

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          Abstract

          The longest‐wavelength π‐to‐π* electronic excitations of rhodamine‐like dyes (RDs) with different group 16 heteroatoms (O, S, Se, Te) have been investigated. Time‐dependent Kohn–Sham theory (TDKST) calculations were compared with coupled‐cluster (CC) and equations‐of‐motion (EOM) CC results for π‐to‐π* singlet and triplet excitations. The RDs exhibit characteristics in the TDKST calculations that are very similar to previously investigated cyanine dyes, in the sense that the singlet energies obtained with nonhybrid functionals are too high compared with the CC results at the SD(T) level. The errors became increasingly larger for functionals with increasing amounts of exact exchange. TDKST with all tested functionals led to severe underestimations of the corresponding triplet excitations and overestimations of the singlet–triplet gaps. Long‐range‐corrected range‐separated exchange and “optimal tuning” of the range separation parameter did not significantly improve the TDKST results. A detailed analysis suggests that the problem is differential electron correlation between the ground and excited states, which is not treated sufficiently by the relatively small integrals over the exchange‐correlation response kernel that enter the excitation energy expression. Numerical criteria are suggested that may help identify “cyanine‐like” problems in TDKST calculations of excitation spectra.

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          Basis set exchange: a community database for computational sciences.

          Basis sets are some of the most important input data for computational models in the chemistry, materials, biology, and other science domains that utilize computational quantum mechanics methods. Providing a shared, Web-accessible environment where researchers can not only download basis sets in their required format but browse the data, contribute new basis sets, and ultimately curate and manage the data as a community will facilitate growth of this resource and encourage sharing both data and knowledge. We describe the Basis Set Exchange (BSE), a Web portal that provides advanced browsing and download capabilities, facilities for contributing basis set data, and an environment that incorporates tools to foster development and interaction of communities. The BSE leverages and enables continued development of the basis set library originally assembled at the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory.
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            Benchmarks for electronically excited states: CASPT2, CC2, CCSD, and CC3.

            A benchmark set of 28 medium-sized organic molecules is assembled that covers the most important classes of chromophores including polyenes and other unsaturated aliphatic compounds, aromatic hydrocarbons, heterocycles, carbonyl compounds, and nucleobases. Vertical excitation energies and one-electron properties are computed for the valence excited states of these molecules using both multiconfigurational second-order perturbation theory, CASPT2, and a hierarchy of coupled cluster methods, CC2, CCSD, and CC3. The calculations are done at identical geometries (MP26-31G*) and with the same basis set (TZVP). In most cases, the CC3 results are very close to the CASPT2 results, whereas there are larger deviations with CC2 and CCSD, especially in singlet excited states that are not dominated by single excitations. Statistical evaluations of the calculated vertical excitation energies for 223 states are presented and discussed in order to assess the relative merits of the applied methods. CC2 reproduces the CC3 reference data for the singlets better than CCSD. On the basis of the current computational results and an extensive survey of the literature, we propose best estimates for the energies of 104 singlet and 63 triplet excited states.
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              TD-DFT Performance for the Visible Absorption Spectra of Organic Dyes:  Conventional versus Long-Range Hybrids.

              The π → π* transitions of more than 100 organic dyes from the major classes of chromophores (quinones, diazo, ...) have been investigated using a Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory (TD-DFT) procedure relying on large atomic basis sets and the systematic modeling of solvent effects. These calculations have been performed with pure (PBE) as well as conventional (PBE0) and long-range (LR) corrected hybrid functionals (LC-PBE, LC-ωPBE, and CAM-B3LYP). The computed wavelengths are systematically guided by the percentage of exact exchange included at intermediate interelectronic distance, i.e., the λmax value always follows the PBE > PBE0 > CAM-B3LYP > LC-PBE > LC-ωPBE > HF sequence. The functional giving the best estimates of the experimental transition energies may vary, but PBE0 and CAM-B3LYP tend to outperform all other approaches. The latter functional is shown to be especially adequate to treat molecules with delocalized excited states. The mean absolute error provided by PBE0 is 22 nm (0.14 eV) with no deviation exceeding 100 nm (0.50 eV):  PBE0 is able to deliver reasonable estimates of the color of most organic dyes of practical or industrial interest. By using a calibration curve, we found that the LR functionals systematically allow an even more consistent description of the low-lying excited-state energies than the conventional hybrids. Indeed, linearly corrected LR approaches yield an average error of 10 nm for each dye family. Therefore, when such statistical treatments can be designed for given sets of dyes, a simple and rapid theoretical procedure allows both a chemically sound and a numerically accurate description of the absorption wavelengths.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                jochena@buffalo.edu
                Journal
                ChemistryOpen
                ChemistryOpen
                10.1002/(ISSN)2191-1363
                OPEN
                ChemistryOpen
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                2191-1363
                02 May 2017
                June 2017
                : 6
                : 3 ( doiID: 10.1002/open.v6.3 )
                : 385-392
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Department of Chemistry, University at BuffaloState University of New York Buffalo NY 14260-3000USA
                [ 2 ] William R. Wiley Environmental Molecular Sciences LaboratoryPacific Northwest National Laboratory Richland WA 99352USA
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6397-7570
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9392-877X
                Article
                OPEN201700046
                10.1002/open.201700046
                5474673
                b91797dc-0669-4f31-a863-6593fba1924c
                © 2017 The Authors. Published by Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 02 March 2017
                Page count
                Figures: 2, Tables: 6, References: 47, Pages: 8, Words: 0
                Categories
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                Custom metadata
                2.0
                open201700046
                June 2017
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:5.1.1 mode:remove_FC converted:19.06.2017

                chromophores,computational chemistry,density functional calculations,electronic spectra,heterocycles

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