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Photoinduced Chemistry: Development and Application of Computational Methods for New Understanding (XCHEM)
Date du début: 1 août 2010, Date de fin: 31 juil. 2015 PROJET  TERMINÉ 

The interaction of light and matter gives rise to a multitude of important and fascinating phenomena.Computational studies of excited states are vital to further our basic understanding of these processes, anddesign and optimise new processes for particular applications. However, the computational chemistry ofexcited states gives rise to many challenging features, including differential static and dynamic correlationeffects, which can often be difficult to separate. Furthermore, regions of non-adiabatic coupling betweenvarious potential energy surfaces are ubiquitous in photochemistry. Such regions where the Born-Oppenheimer approximation breaks down are among the most difficult to treat.The computational chemist must use a wide variety of methods to study photochemistry. However,one important ‘tool’ in the computational arsenal is currently missing for general photochemical problems:namely the ability to undertake systematically converging computations over all of the relevant regions ofthe various (multi-state) potential energy surfaces. The Monte-Carlo Configuration Interaction (MC-CI)method is ideal for this purpose, and has many desirable features, including automatic inclusion of strongstatic correlation effects, and a balanced treatment of all states. Development of MC-CI methods, includinggradients and non-adiabatic couplings is proposed. This will give rise to the unprecedented ability tobenchmark a large variety of photochemical problems, across the entire potential energy surfaces, withsystematic accuracy. The method will be further extended by coupling within molecular mechanics in aquantum mechanics / molecular mechanics (QM/MM) framework to study general excited state / open-shellproblems in complex environments.The work will lead onto the applications research which spans the length scales of chemistry fromsmall molecules to large supramolecular systems. The above MC-CI method and other state-of-the-arttechniques will be applied to photochemical problems of enormous scientific interest. These include highaccuracy studies of inorganic photochemistry where the computational demands can be greatest, but alsowhere high-level electronic structure and dynamics simulation offers exceptional possibility to understandcomplex molecular photochemistry. A practical area of photochemical research with a huge potential isphotodynamic therapy. Here light is used to destroy cancer tissue via the creation of the highly reactivesinglet molecular oxygen species. A deeper understanding of the many processes involved in this is required.These include, single- vs multi-photon absorption, sensitizer internal conversion and intersystem crossing,energy transfer processes with molecular oxygen, solvent effects, and aggregation effects. Detailed andsystematic studies of these fundamental aspects are proposed. The final applied area of study followsnaturally from this and is the supramolecular photochemistry of host-guest molecular sensors. Here advancesare required to allow a detailed understanding. These include the use of molecular dynamics simulation inconjunction with QM/MM and statistical sampling.

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