Electronic and Optical Properties of Small Metal Fluoride Clusters
Author(s) -
Giancarlo Cappellini,
Andrea Bosin,
G. Serra,
J. Furthmüller,
F. Bechstedt,
Silvana Botti
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.0c01317
Subject(s) - time dependent density functional theory , ground state , excited state , binding energy , ionization energy , density functional theory , atomic physics , atom (system on chip) , electronegativity , ionization , chemistry , exciton , metal , absorption spectroscopy , electronic structure , molecule , molecular physics , computational chemistry , ion , physics , condensed matter physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , computer science , embedded system
We report a systematic investigation on the electronic and optical properties of the smallest stable clusters of alkaline-earth metal fluorides, namely, MgF 2 , CaF 2 , SrF 2 , and BaF 2 . For these clusters, we perform density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT (TDDFT) calculations with a localized Gaussian basis set. For each molecule ((MF 2 ) n , n = 1-3, M = Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba), we determine a series of molecular properties, namely, ground-state energies, fragmentation energies, electron affinities, ionization energies, fundamental energy gaps, optical absorption spectra, and exciton binding energies. We compare electronic and optical properties between clusters of different sizes with the same metal atom and between clusters of the same size with different metal atoms. From this analysis, it turns out that MgF 2 clusters have distinguished ground-state and excited-state properties with respect to the other fluoride molecules. Sizeable reductions of the optical onset energies and a consistent increase of excitonic effects are observed for all clusters under study with respect to the corresponding bulk systems. Possible consequences of the present results are discussed with respect to applied and fundamental research.
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