15 research outputs found
Charge-Transfer Dynamics in the Lowest Excited State of a PentaceneāFullerene Complex: Implications for Organic Solar Cells
We
characterize the dynamic nature of the lowest excited state
in a pentacene/C<sub>60</sub> complex on the femtosecond time scale,
via a combination of ab initio molecular dynamics and time-dependent
density functional theory. We analyze the correlations between the
molecular vibrations of the complex and the oscillations in the electron-transfer
character of its lowest excited state, which point to vibration-induced
coherences between the (pentacene-based) local-excitation (LE) state
and the complex charge-transfer (CT) state. We discuss the implications
of our results on this model system for the exciton-dissociation process
in organic solar cells
Probing Vibrationally Mediated Ultrafast Excited-State Reaction Dynamics with Multireference (CASPT2) Trajectories
Excited-state trajectories computed
at the complete active space
second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2) reveal how vibrational excitation
controls the molecular approach to the intersection space that drives
the photodissociation of a prototypical halogenated methyl radical,
namely CF<sub>2</sub>I. Translating the FranckāCondon structure
along the ground-state CASPT2 vibrational modes in this system followed
by propagating the displaced structures in the first excited doublet
state simulates specific vibrational excitations and vibrationally
mediated dynamics, respectively. Three distinct situations are encountered:
the trajectories (i) converge to an energetically flat segment of
the intersection space, (ii) locate a segment of the intersection
space, and (iii) access a region where the intersection space degeneracy
is lifted to form a ridge of avoided crossings. The computational
protocol documented herein can be used as a tool to design control
strategies based on selective excitation of vibrational modes, including
adaptive feedback schemes using coherent light sources
Probing Vibrationally Mediated Ultrafast Excited-State Reaction Dynamics with Multireference (CASPT2) Trajectories
Excited-state trajectories computed
at the complete active space
second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2) reveal how vibrational excitation
controls the molecular approach to the intersection space that drives
the photodissociation of a prototypical halogenated methyl radical,
namely CF<sub>2</sub>I. Translating the FranckāCondon structure
along the ground-state CASPT2 vibrational modes in this system followed
by propagating the displaced structures in the first excited doublet
state simulates specific vibrational excitations and vibrationally
mediated dynamics, respectively. Three distinct situations are encountered:
the trajectories (i) converge to an energetically flat segment of
the intersection space, (ii) locate a segment of the intersection
space, and (iii) access a region where the intersection space degeneracy
is lifted to form a ridge of avoided crossings. The computational
protocol documented herein can be used as a tool to design control
strategies based on selective excitation of vibrational modes, including
adaptive feedback schemes using coherent light sources
Probing Vibrationally Mediated Ultrafast Excited-State Reaction Dynamics with Multireference (CASPT2) Trajectories
Excited-state trajectories computed
at the complete active space
second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2) reveal how vibrational excitation
controls the molecular approach to the intersection space that drives
the photodissociation of a prototypical halogenated methyl radical,
namely CF<sub>2</sub>I. Translating the FranckāCondon structure
along the ground-state CASPT2 vibrational modes in this system followed
by propagating the displaced structures in the first excited doublet
state simulates specific vibrational excitations and vibrationally
mediated dynamics, respectively. Three distinct situations are encountered:
the trajectories (i) converge to an energetically flat segment of
the intersection space, (ii) locate a segment of the intersection
space, and (iii) access a region where the intersection space degeneracy
is lifted to form a ridge of avoided crossings. The computational
protocol documented herein can be used as a tool to design control
strategies based on selective excitation of vibrational modes, including
adaptive feedback schemes using coherent light sources
Probing Vibrationally Mediated Ultrafast Excited-State Reaction Dynamics with Multireference (CASPT2) Trajectories
Excited-state trajectories computed
at the complete active space
second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2) reveal how vibrational excitation
controls the molecular approach to the intersection space that drives
the photodissociation of a prototypical halogenated methyl radical,
namely CF<sub>2</sub>I. Translating the FranckāCondon structure
along the ground-state CASPT2 vibrational modes in this system followed
by propagating the displaced structures in the first excited doublet
state simulates specific vibrational excitations and vibrationally
mediated dynamics, respectively. Three distinct situations are encountered:
the trajectories (i) converge to an energetically flat segment of
the intersection space, (ii) locate a segment of the intersection
space, and (iii) access a region where the intersection space degeneracy
is lifted to form a ridge of avoided crossings. The computational
protocol documented herein can be used as a tool to design control
strategies based on selective excitation of vibrational modes, including
adaptive feedback schemes using coherent light sources
Probing Vibrationally Mediated Ultrafast Excited-State Reaction Dynamics with Multireference (CASPT2) Trajectories
Excited-state trajectories computed
at the complete active space
second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2) reveal how vibrational excitation
controls the molecular approach to the intersection space that drives
the photodissociation of a prototypical halogenated methyl radical,
namely CF<sub>2</sub>I. Translating the FranckāCondon structure
along the ground-state CASPT2 vibrational modes in this system followed
by propagating the displaced structures in the first excited doublet
state simulates specific vibrational excitations and vibrationally
mediated dynamics, respectively. Three distinct situations are encountered:
the trajectories (i) converge to an energetically flat segment of
the intersection space, (ii) locate a segment of the intersection
space, and (iii) access a region where the intersection space degeneracy
is lifted to form a ridge of avoided crossings. The computational
protocol documented herein can be used as a tool to design control
strategies based on selective excitation of vibrational modes, including
adaptive feedback schemes using coherent light sources
Probing Vibrationally Mediated Ultrafast Excited-State Reaction Dynamics with Multireference (CASPT2) Trajectories
Excited-state trajectories computed
at the complete active space
second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2) reveal how vibrational excitation
controls the molecular approach to the intersection space that drives
the photodissociation of a prototypical halogenated methyl radical,
namely CF<sub>2</sub>I. Translating the FranckāCondon structure
along the ground-state CASPT2 vibrational modes in this system followed
by propagating the displaced structures in the first excited doublet
state simulates specific vibrational excitations and vibrationally
mediated dynamics, respectively. Three distinct situations are encountered:
the trajectories (i) converge to an energetically flat segment of
the intersection space, (ii) locate a segment of the intersection
space, and (iii) access a region where the intersection space degeneracy
is lifted to form a ridge of avoided crossings. The computational
protocol documented herein can be used as a tool to design control
strategies based on selective excitation of vibrational modes, including
adaptive feedback schemes using coherent light sources
Paper-tablet discrepancies and device attributable coding errors with reference to residency status.
<p><i>n: number of interviews.</i></p><p><i>%: Percentage of errors with reference to 234 comparison fields. p-value: Simple mixed binomial regression model with factor research assistant team.</i></p><p><i>NA: Not applicable.</i></p><p><i>The difference between the means of paper errors and tablet errors for urban and rural interviews is statistically insignificant. Paired t-test p-values for urban and rural setting are 0.83 and 0.75 respectively.</i></p><p>Paper-tablet discrepancies and device attributable coding errors with reference to residency status.</p
Interviewer subjective preference for interviewing device.
<p><i>Nā=ānumber of interviews.</i></p><p>Interviewer subjective preference for interviewing device.</p
Probing Vibrationally Mediated Ultrafast Excited-State Reaction Dynamics with Multireference (CASPT2) Trajectories
Excited-state trajectories computed
at the complete active space
second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2) reveal how vibrational excitation
controls the molecular approach to the intersection space that drives
the photodissociation of a prototypical halogenated methyl radical,
namely CF<sub>2</sub>I. Translating the FranckāCondon structure
along the ground-state CASPT2 vibrational modes in this system followed
by propagating the displaced structures in the first excited doublet
state simulates specific vibrational excitations and vibrationally
mediated dynamics, respectively. Three distinct situations are encountered:
the trajectories (i) converge to an energetically flat segment of
the intersection space, (ii) locate a segment of the intersection
space, and (iii) access a region where the intersection space degeneracy
is lifted to form a ridge of avoided crossings. The computational
protocol documented herein can be used as a tool to design control
strategies based on selective excitation of vibrational modes, including
adaptive feedback schemes using coherent light sources