It is a highly desirable but difficult task to predict the molecular fluorescence quantum efficiency from first principles. The molecule in the excited state can undergo spontaneous radiation, conversion of electronic energy to nuclear motion, or chemical reaction. For relatively large molecules, it is impossible to obtain the full potential energy surfaces for the ground state and the excited states to study the excited-state dynamics. We show that, under harmonic approximation by considering the Duschinsky rotation effect, the molecular fluorescence properties can be quantitatively calculated from first principles coupled with our correlation function formalism for the internal conversion. In particular, we have explained the peculiar fluorescence behaviors of two isomeric compounds, cis,cis-1,2,3,4-tetraphenyl-1,3-butadiene and 1,1,4,4-tetraphenyl-butadiene, the former being nonemissive in solution and strongly emissive in aggregation or at low temperature, and the latter being strongly emissive in solution. The roles of low-frequency phenyl ring twist motions and their Duschinsky mode mixings are found to be crucial, especially to reveal the temperature dependence. As an independent check, we take a look at the well-established photophysics of 1,4-diphenylbutadiene for its three different conformers. Both the calculated radiative and nonradiative rates are in excellent agreement with the available experimental measurements.
Duschinsky rotation effect is a simple and effective way to characterize the difference between the ground state and excited state potential energy surfaces. For complex molecules, harmonic oscillator model is still the practical way to describe the dynamics of excited states. Based on the first-order perturbation theory a la Fermi golden rule, the authors have applied the path integral of Gaussian type for the correlation function to derive an analytic formalism to calculate the internal conversion rate process with Duschinsky rotation effect being taken into account. The validity of their formalism is verified through comparison with previous work, both analytically for the case of neglecting Duschinsky rotation and numerically for the ethylene molecules with two-mode mixing. Their expression is derived for multimode mixing.
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