Conical Intersections Studied by the Configuration-Interaction-Corrected Tamm–Dancoff Method
Article 2025 en
Authors
LX
Lei Xu
VF
Victor M. Freixas
FA
Flavia Aleotti
Abstract
1 min read
Conical intersections directly mediate the internal energy conversion in photoinduced processes in a wide range of chemical and biological systems. Because of the Brillouin theorem, many conventional electronic structure methods, including configuration interaction with single excitations from a Hartree-Fock reference and time-dependent density functional theory in either the linear response approximation (TDDFT) or Tamm-Dancoff approximation (DFT-TDA), have the wrong dimensionality for conical intersections between the ground state (<i>S</i><sub>0</sub>) and the first excited state (<i>S</i><sub>1</sub>) of the same multiplicity. This leads to unphysical state crossings. Here, we implement and assess the configuration-interaction-corrected Tamm-Dancoff approximation (CIC-TDA) that restores the correct dimensionality of conical intersections by including the coupling between the reference state and the intersecting excited state. We apply the CIC-TDA method to the <i>S</i><sub>1</sub>/<i>S</i><sub>0</sub> conical intersections in ammonia (NH<sub>3</sub>), ethylene (C<sub>2</sub>H<sub>4</sub>), bithiophene (C<sub>8</sub>H<sub>6</sub>S<sub>2</sub>), azobenzene (C<sub>12</sub>H<sub>10</sub>N<sub>2</sub>), and 11-cis retinal protonated Schiff base (PSB11) in vacuo. We show that this black-box approach can produce potential energy surfaces (PESs) of comparable accuracy to multireference wave function methods. The method validated here can allow cost-efficient explorations of photoinduced electronically nonadiabatic dynamics, especially for large molecules and complex systems.
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.