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1.
J Comput Chem ; 44(2): 105-116, 2023 Jan 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36214745

RESUMO

In this paper we propose a numerical method to localize many-electron excited states. To characterize the electronic structure of the electronic excited states of a system, quantum chemistry methods typically yield a delocalized description of the excitations. Some a priori localization methods have been developed to provide an intuitive local picture of the excited states. They typically require a good strategy to separate the system of interest from its environment, or a set of a priori localized orbitals, that may reduce their computational accuracy. Here, we introduce an a posteriori method to localize delocalized many-body excited states directly obtained from quantum chemistry calculations. A localization metric for the excited states is defined from their representation as electron-hole pairs, which is encoded in the transition density matrix. This novel a posteriori strategy thus allows to localize excitons within a volume around selected fragments of a complex molecular system without tempering with its quantum chemical treatment. The method is tested on π-stacked oligomers of phenanthrenes and pyrenes. It is found to efficiently localize and separate the excitons according to their character while preserving the information about delocalized many-body states at a low computational cost.

2.
Chemphyschem ; 24(2): e202200463, 2023 Jan 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36166371

RESUMO

The present work focuses on probing ultrafast charge migration after symmetry-breaking excitation using ultrashort laser pulses. LiCN is chosen as prototypical system because it can be oriented in the laboratory frame and it possesses optically-accessible charge transfer states at low energies. The charge migration is simulated within the hybrid time-dependent density functional theory/configuration interaction framework. Time-resolved electronic current densities and simulated time-resolved x-ray diffraction signals are used to unravel the mechanism of charge migration. Our simulations demonstrate that specific choices of laser polarization lead to a control over the symmetry of the induced charge migration. Moreover, time-resolved x-ray diffraction signals are shown to encode transient symmetry reduction at intermediate times.

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