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Model calculations for the prediction of the diradical character of physisorbed molecules: p -benzyne/MgO and p -benzyne/SrO.

Kohei TadaTakashi KawakamiYoyo Hinuma
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2023)
The analysis of the diradical state of functional open-shell molecules is important for understanding their physical properties and chemical reactivity. The diradical character is an important factor in the functional elucidation and design of open-shell molecules. In recent years, attempts have been made to immobilise functional open-shell molecules on surfaces to form devices. However, the influence of surface interactions on the diradical state remains unclear. In this study, the physisorption structures of p -benzyne, which is a typical diradical molecule, on MgO(001) and SrO(001) surfaces are used as models to investigate how the diradical character is affected by physisorption. This is done using approximate spin-projected density functional theory calculations with dispersion correction and plane-wave basis (AP-DFT-D3/plane-wave calculations). The diradical character change (Δ y ) due to adsorption can be categorised into three factors, namely the change due to the distortion of the diradical molecule (Δ y dis ), the interaction between neighbouring diradical molecules (Δ y coh ), and molecule-surface interactions (Δ y surf ). In all the calculated models, physisorption reduced the diradical character (Δ y < 0), and the contribution of Δ y surf was the largest among the three factors. The calculated results show that adsorption induces electron delocalisation to π-conjugated orbitals and intramolecular charge polarisation, both of which contribute to reducing the occupancy of singly occupied molecular orbitals. This indicates that the diradical character of p -benzyne is reduced by the stabilisation of the resonance structures. Furthermore, geometry optimisation of the surfaces shows that the chemical-soft surface (SrO) varies the diradical character more significantly than the chemical-hard surface (MgO). This study shows that the open-shell electronic state and stack structure of diradical molecules can be controlled through the analysis of the surface diradical state.
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