Molecules characterized by an inverted singlet-triplet gap ( ΔEST<0$$ \Delta {E}_{\mathrm{ST}}<0 $$ ) hold potential for optoelectronic applications. Electronic correlation and environmental polarization are key factors influencing negative ΔEST$$ \Delta {E}_{\mathrm{ST}} $$ , and the latter is gaining attention for its possible role in "mimicking" correlation contributions to yield negative ΔEST$$ \Delta {E}_{\mathrm{ST}} $$ . However, a comprehensive study of solvation effects on both structures and energy gaps is still lacking. In this work, we evaluate computational strategies for calculating ΔEST<0$$ \Delta {E}_{\mathrm{ST}}<0 $$ gaps, incorporating electronic correlation and solvent polarization in molecules exhibiting singlet-triplet inversion. Using RMS-CASPT2 as a benchmark, we demonstrate that double-hybrid density functionals and mixed-reference spin-flip TD-DFT (MRSF-TD-DFT) can partially recover electronic correlation. Furthermore, we investigate solvation effects on both singlet and triplet excited states, highlighting the limitations of linear-response schemes in continuum solvation models. We finally develop a protocol combining electronic correlation and state-specific solvent polarization using double-hybrid functionals and the Vertical Excitation Model (VEM), leveraging its Lagrangian implementation to compute structures and adiabatic energies. Applying our B2PLYP/VEM(UD) protocol to larger systems with experimentally observed negative ΔEST$$ \Delta {E}_{\mathrm{ST}} $$ gaps, we quantitatively reproduce experimental emissive and non-radiative transition rates.
On the Role of Electronic Correlation and State‐Specific Environment Polarization in Singlet–Triplet Gap Inversion
Salvi, EsterPrimo
;Juliani Costa, Gustavo;Guido, Ciro A.
Ultimo
2025-01-01
Abstract
Molecules characterized by an inverted singlet-triplet gap ( ΔEST<0$$ \Delta {E}_{\mathrm{ST}}<0 $$ ) hold potential for optoelectronic applications. Electronic correlation and environmental polarization are key factors influencing negative ΔEST$$ \Delta {E}_{\mathrm{ST}} $$ , and the latter is gaining attention for its possible role in "mimicking" correlation contributions to yield negative ΔEST$$ \Delta {E}_{\mathrm{ST}} $$ . However, a comprehensive study of solvation effects on both structures and energy gaps is still lacking. In this work, we evaluate computational strategies for calculating ΔEST<0$$ \Delta {E}_{\mathrm{ST}}<0 $$ gaps, incorporating electronic correlation and solvent polarization in molecules exhibiting singlet-triplet inversion. Using RMS-CASPT2 as a benchmark, we demonstrate that double-hybrid density functionals and mixed-reference spin-flip TD-DFT (MRSF-TD-DFT) can partially recover electronic correlation. Furthermore, we investigate solvation effects on both singlet and triplet excited states, highlighting the limitations of linear-response schemes in continuum solvation models. We finally develop a protocol combining electronic correlation and state-specific solvent polarization using double-hybrid functionals and the Vertical Excitation Model (VEM), leveraging its Lagrangian implementation to compute structures and adiabatic energies. Applying our B2PLYP/VEM(UD) protocol to larger systems with experimentally observed negative ΔEST$$ \Delta {E}_{\mathrm{ST}} $$ gaps, we quantitatively reproduce experimental emissive and non-radiative transition rates.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
J Comput Chem - 2025 - Salvi - On the Role of Electronic Correlation and State‐Specific Environment Polarization in Singlet-1.pdf
file ad accesso aperto
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
1.83 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.83 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


