4.7 Article

Tuned range separated hybrid functionals for solvated low bandgap oligomers

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 143, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.4926468

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Bavarian State Ministry of Science, Research, and the Arts for the Collaborative Research Network Solar Technologies go Hybrid

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The description of charge transfer excitations has long been a challenge to time dependent density functional theory. The recently developed concept of optimally tuned range separated hybrid (OT-RSH) functionals has proven to describe charge transfer excitations accurately in many cases. However, describing solvated or embedded systems is yet a challenge. This challenge is not only computational but also conceptual, because the tuning requires identifying a specific orbital, typically the highest occupied one of the molecule under study. For solvated molecules, this orbital may be delocalized over the solvent. We here demonstrate that one way of overcoming this problem is to use a locally projected self-consistent field diagonalization on an absolutely localized molecular orbital expansion. We employ this approach to determine ionization energies and the optical gap of solvated oligothiophenes, i.e., paradigm low gap systems that are of relevance in organic electronics. Dioxane solvent molecules are explicitly represented in our calculations, and the ambiguities of straightforward parameter tuning in solution are elucidated. We show that a consistent estimate of the optimal range separated parameter (omega) at the limit of bulk solvation can be obtained by gradually extending the solvated system. In particular, omega is influenced by the solvent beyond the first coordination sphere. For determining ionization energies, a considerable number of solvent molecules on the first solvation shell must be taken into account. We demonstrate that accurately calculating optical gaps of solvated systems using OT-RSH can be done in three steps: (i) including the chemical environment when determining the range-separation parameter, (ii) taking into account the screening due to the solvent, and (iii) using realistic molecular geometries. (C) 2015 AIP Publishing LLC.

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