Analytical Gradients for Nuclear-Electronic Orbital Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory: Excited-State Geometry Optimizations and Adiabatic Excitation Energies

Zhen Tao, Saswata Roy, Patrick E. Schneider, Fabijan Pavošević, Sharon Hammes-Schiffer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

The computational investigation of photochemical processes often entails the calculation of excited-state geometries, energies, and energy gradients. The nuclear-electronic orbital (NEO) approach treats specified nuclei, typically protons, quantum mechanically on the same level as the electrons, thereby including the associated nuclear quantum effects and non-Born-Oppenheimer behavior into quantum chemistry calculations. The multicomponent density functional theory (NEO-DFT) and time-dependent DFT (NEO-TDDFT) methods allow efficient calculations of ground and excited states, respectively. Herein, the analytical gradients are derived and implemented for the NEO-TDDFT method and the associated Tamm-Dancoff approximation (NEO-TDA). The programmable equations for these analytical gradients as well as the NEO-DFT analytical Hessian are provided. The NEO approach includes the anharmonic zero-point energy (ZPE) and density delocalization associated with the quantum protons as well as vibronic mixing in geometry optimizations and energy calculations of ground and excited states. The harmonic ZPE associated with the other nuclei can be computed via the NEO Hessian. This approach is used to compute the 0-0 adiabatic excitation energies for a set of nine small molecules with all protons quantized, exhibiting slight improvement over the conventional electronic approach. Geometry optimizations of two excited-state intramolecular proton-transfer systems, [2,2′-bipyridyl]-3-ol and [2,2′-bipyridyl]-3,3′-diol, are performed with one and two quantized protons, respectively. The NEO calculations for these systems produce electronically excited-state geometries with stronger intramolecular hydrogen bonds and similar relative stabilities compared to conventional electronic methods. This work provides the foundation for nonadiabatic dynamics simulations of fundamental processes such as photoinduced proton transfer and proton-coupled electron transfer.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)5110-5122
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Chemical Theory and Computation
Volume17
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 10 2021
Externally publishedYes

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Computer Science Applications
  • Physical and Theoretical Chemistry

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