Nonadiabatic excited-state dynamics and energy gradients in the framework of FMO-LC-TDDFTB
Abstract: We introduce a novel methodology for simulating the excited-state dynamics of extensive molecular aggregates in the framework of the long-range corrected time-dependent density-functional tight-binding fragment molecular orbital method (FMO-LC-TDDFTB) combined with the mean-field Ehrenfest method. The electronic structure of the system is described in a quasi-diabatic basis composed of locally excited and charge-transfer states of all fragments. In order to carry out nonadiabatic molecular dynamics simulatios, we derive and implement the excited-state gradients of the locally excited and charge-transfer states. Subsequently, the accuracy of the analytical excited-state gradients is evaluated. The applicability to the simulation of exciton transport in organic semiconductors is illustrated on a large cluster of anthracene molecules. Additionally, nonadiabatic molecular dynamics simulations of a model system of benzothieno-benzothiophene molecules highlight the methods utility in studying charge-transfer dynamics in organic materials. Our new methodology will facilitate the investigation of excitonic transfer in extensive biological systems, nanomaterials and other complex molecular systems consisting of thousands of atoms.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.