Electronic Couplings for Singlet Fission Processes Based on The Fragment Particle-Hole Densities

25 April 2023, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

A new diabatization scheme is proposed to calculate the electronic couplings for the singlet fission process in multichromophoric systems. In this approach, a robust descriptor that treats single and multiple excitations on an equal footing is adopted to quantify the localization degree of the particle and hole densities of the electronic states. By maximally localizing the particles and holes in terms of predefined molecular fragments, quasi-diabatic states with well-defined characters (locally excited, charge transfer, correlated triplet pair, etc.) can be automatically constructed as the linear combinations of the adiabatic ones, and the electronic couplings can be directly obtained. This approach is very general in that it applies to electronic states with various spin multiplicities and can be combined with various kinds of preliminary electronic structure calculations. Due to the high numerical efficiency, it is able to manipulate more than 100 electronic states in diabatization. The applications to the tetracene dimer and trimer reveals that high-lying multiply-excited charge transfer states have significant influences on both the formation and separation of the correlated triplet pair, and can even enlarge the coupling for the latter process by one order of magnitude.

Keywords

diabatization
singlet fission
charge-transfer state
locally excited state
triplet-pair state

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
Actions
Title
Supporting Information
Description
Details about the benchmark of CT state energies with CCSD(T) calculations; supplementary data including the singlet and triplet adiabatic excited state properties of the dimer AB, singlet adiabatic excited state properties of the trimer ABA', singlet quasi-diabatic state properties of the dimer AB and trimer ABA', electronic couplings of low-lying LE and TT states to the high-lying CT states in the dimer AB, and atomic coordinates of the dimer AB and trimer ABA'.
Actions

Comments

Comments are not moderated before they are posted, but they can be removed by the site moderators if they are found to be in contravention of our Commenting Policy [opens in a new tab] - please read this policy before you post. Comments should be used for scholarly discussion of the content in question. You can find more information about how to use the commenting feature here [opens in a new tab] .
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy [opens in a new tab] and Terms of Service [opens in a new tab] apply.