Extensive Analysis of the Parameters Influencing Radiative Rates Obtained through Vibronic Calculations.
Manon H E BousquetThomas V PapineauKoen VeysDaniel EscuderoDenis JacqueminPublished in: Journal of chemical theory and computation (2023)
Defining a theoretical model systematically delivering accurate ab initio predictions of the fluorescence quantum yields of organic dyes is highly desirable for designing improved fluorophores in a systematic rather than trial-and-error way. To this end, the first required step is to obtain reliable radiative rates ( k r ), as low k r typically precludes effective emission. In the present contribution, using a series of 10 substituted phenyls with known experimental k r , we analyze the impact of the computational protocol on the k r determined through the thermal vibration correlation function (TVCF) approach on the basis of time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations of the energies, structures, and vibrational parameters. Both the electronic structure (selected exchange-correlation functional, application or not of the Tamm-Dancoff approximation) and the vibronic parameters (line-shape formalism, coordinate system, potential energy surface model, and dipole expansion) are tackled. Considering all possible combinations yields more than 3500 cases, allowing to extract statistically-relevant information regarding the impact of each computational parameter on the magnitude of the estimated k r . It turns out that the selected vibronic model can have a significant impact on the computed k r , especially the potential energy surface model. This effect is of the same order of magnitude as the difference noted between B3LYP and CAM-B3LYP estimates. For the treated compounds, all evaluated functionals do deliver reasonable trends, fitting the experimental values.