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Accurate Modeling of Excitonic Coupling in Cyanine Dye Cy3
Author(s) -
Mohammed I. Sorour,
Kurt A. Kistler,
Andrew H. Marcus,
Spiridoula Matsika
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry. a/the journal of physical chemistry. a.
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.756
H-Index - 235
eISSN - 1520-5215
pISSN - 1089-5639
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpca.1c05556
Subject(s) - coupling (piping) , chemistry , ab initio , excitation , dipole , cyanine , time dependent density functional theory , molecular physics , population , atomic physics , density functional theory , physics , computational chemistry , materials science , quantum mechanics , demography , organic chemistry , sociology , metallurgy , fluorescence
Accurate modeling of excitonic coupling in molecules is of great importance for inferring the structures and dynamics of coupled systems. Cy3 is a cyanine dye that is widely used in molecular spectroscopy. Its well-separated excitation bands, high sensitivity to the surroundings, and the high energy transfer efficiency make it a perfect choice for excitonic coupling experiments. Many methods have been used to model the excitonic coupling in molecules with varying degrees of accuracy. The atomic transition charge model offers a high-accuracy and cost-effective way to calculating the excitonic coupling. The main focus of this work is to generate high-quality atomic transition charges that can accurately model the Cy3 dye's transition density. The transition density of the excitation of the ground to first excited state is calculated using configuration-interaction singles and time-dependent density functional theory and is benchmarked against the algebraic diagrammatic construction method. Using the transition density we derived the atomic transition charges using two approaches: Mulliken population analysis and charges fitted to the transition electrostatic potential. The quality of the charges is examined, and their ability to accurately calculate the excitonic coupling is assessed via comparison to experimental data of an artificial biscyanine construct. Theoretical comparisons to the supermolecule ab initio couplings and the widely used point-dipole approximation are also made. Results show that using the transition electrostatic potential is a reliable approach for generating the transition atomic charges. A high-quality set of charges, that can be used to model the Cy3 dye dimer excitonic coupling with high-accuracy and a reasonable computational cost, is obtained.

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