Xinwei Ji, Zheng Pei, Kim Ngan Huynh, Junjie Yang, Xiaoliang Pan, Binju Wang, Yuezhi Mao, Yihan Shao
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Among various types of chromophore-solvent interactions, the entanglement of chromophore and solvent orbitals, when significant, can cause the chromophore frontier orbitals to spread over to nearby solvent molecules, introducing partial charge-transfer character to the lowest excitations of the chromophore and lowering the excitation energies. While highly intuitive, the physical details of such orbital entanglement effects on the excitation energies of chromophores have yet to be fully explored. Here, using two well-known biochromophores (oxyluciferin and p-hydroxybenzyledene imidazolinone) as examples, we show that the chromophore-solvent orbital entanglements can be elucidated using two quantum mechanical embedding schemes: density matrix embedding theory and absolutely localized molecular orbitals. However, there remains a great challenge to incorporate the orbital entanglement effect in combined quantum mechanical molecular mechanical (QM/MM) calculations, and we hope that our findings will stimulate the development of new methods in that direction.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Chemical Physics publishes quantitative and rigorous science of long-lasting value in methods and applications of chemical physics. The Journal also publishes brief Communications of significant new findings, Perspectives on the latest advances in the field, and Special Topic issues. The Journal focuses on innovative research in experimental and theoretical areas of chemical physics, including spectroscopy, dynamics, kinetics, statistical mechanics, and quantum mechanics. In addition, topical areas such as polymers, soft matter, materials, surfaces/interfaces, and systems of biological relevance are of increasing importance.
Topical coverage includes:
Theoretical Methods and Algorithms
Advanced Experimental Techniques
Atoms, Molecules, and Clusters
Liquids, Glasses, and Crystals
Surfaces, Interfaces, and Materials
Polymers and Soft Matter
Biological Molecules and Networks.