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1.
J Chem Phys ; 155(22): 224109, 2021 Dec 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34911315

ABSTRACT

Fermi-Löwdin orbitals (FLOs) are a special set of localized orbitals, which have become commonly used in combination with the Perdew-Zunger self-interaction correction (SIC) in the FLO-SIC method. The FLOs are obtained for a set of occupied orbitals by specifying a classical position for each electron. These positions are known as Fermi-orbital descriptors (FODs), and they have a clear relation to chemical bonding. In this study, we show how FLOs and FODs can be used to initialize, interpret, and justify SIC solutions in a common chemical picture, both within FLO-SIC and in traditional variational SIC, and to locate distinct local minima in either of these approaches. We demonstrate that FLOs based on Lewis theory lead to symmetry breaking for benzene-the electron density is found to break symmetry already at the symmetric molecular structure-while ones from Linnett's double-quartet theory reproduce symmetric electron densities and molecular geometries. Introducing a benchmark set of 16 planar cyclic molecules, we show that using Lewis theory as the starting point can lead to artifactual dipole moments of up to 1 D, while Linnett SIC dipole moments are in better agreement with experimental values. We suggest using the dipole moment as a diagnostic of symmetry breaking in SIC and monitoring it in all SIC calculations. We show that Linnett structures can often be seen as superpositions of Lewis structures and propose Linnett structures as a simple way to describe aromatic systems in SIC with reduced symmetry breaking. The role of hovering FODs is also briefly discussed.

2.
J Phys Condens Matter ; 33(12)2021 Jan 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33352534

ABSTRACT

Electronic structure and transport characteristics of coupled CdS and ZnSe quantum dots are studied using density functional theory and non equilibrium Greens function method respectively. Our investigations show that in these novel coupled dots, the Frontier occupied and unoccupied molecular orbitals are spatially located in two different parts, thereby indicating the possibility of asymmetry in electronic transport. We have calculated electronic transport through the coupled quantum dot by varying the coupling strength between the individual quantum dots in the limits of weak and strong coupling. Calculations reveal asymmetric current vs voltage curves in both the limits indicating the rectifying properties of the coupled quantum dots. Additionally we discuss the possibility to tune the switching behavior of the coupled dots by different gate geometries.

3.
J Comput Chem ; 39(29): 2463-2471, 2018 Nov 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30306597

ABSTRACT

The Fermi-Löwdin orbital self-interaction correction (FLO-SIC) methodology is applied to atoms and molecules from the standard G2-1 test set. For the first time FLO-SIC results for the GGA-type PBE functional are presented. In addition, examples where FLO-SIC like any proper SIC provides qualitative improvements compared to standard DFT functionals are discussed in detail: the dissociation limit for H 2 + , the step-wise linearity behavior for fractional occupation, as well as the significant reduction of the error of static polarizabilities. Further, ionization potentials and enthalpies of formation obtained by means of the FLO-SIC DFT method are compared to other SIC variants and experimental values. The self-interaction correction gives significant improvements if used with the LDA functional but shows worse performance in case of enthalpies of formation if the PBE-GGA functional is used. The errors are analyzed and the importance of the overbinding of hydrogen is discussed. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

4.
Dalton Trans ; 46(12): 3963-3979, 2017 Mar 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28265607

ABSTRACT

The synthesis of four NiII formate complexes of the type [Ni(N∩N)n][O2CH]2 (2, adduct with 3/4 EtOH, N∩N = en, e[combining low line]thylen[combining low line]ediamine, n = 3; 4, N∩N = dien, N,N',N''-d[combining low line]i[combining low line]e[combining low line]thylen[combining low line]etriamine, n = 2), [Ni2(O2CH)4(H2O)(tmeda)2] (3, tmeda = N,N,N',N'-t[combining low line]etram[combining low line]ethyle[combining low line]thylened[combining low line]ia[combining low line]mine) and [{Ni(O2CH)2(pmdta)}2·H2O] (5, pmdta = N,N',N',N'',N''-p[combining low line]entam[combining low line]ethyld[combining low line]iethylenet[combining low line]ria[combining low line]mine) by a reaction of [{Ni(O2CH)2}·2H2O] (1) with the respective N-donor bases is reported. The structures of 2-5 in the solid state were determined by single X-ray structure analysis, revealing a discrete dinuclear structure of 3 and the formation of polymeric networks in the case of 2, 4 and 5 due to intermolecular hydrogen bonding. SQUID and ESR measurements of 3 evidenced a weak antiferromagnetic coupling between the NiII ions and an easy plane magnetic anisotropy. Accompanying quantum chemical studies of the magnetic properties and IR characteristics of 3 were performed to strengthen the conclusions drawn from experimentally obtained data. The thermal decomposition temperatures of 2-5 were determined by TG (thermogravimetry) and obtained residues were analyzed by PXRD (powder X-ray diffraction) measurements. The decomposition processes were completed at 207 (3), 215 (5), 250 (2) and 273 °C (4) and are shown to result in the formation of pure metallic nickel.

5.
Nanoscale ; 6(23): 14508-13, 2014 Nov 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25347765

ABSTRACT

We show that the recently synthesized charge-transfer material picene-F4TCNQ can be used as a gate-voltage controlled molecular switch. The picene-F4TCNQ system is compared with the extensively characterized anthraquinone-based molecular system, which is known to exhibit large switching ratios due to quantum interference effects. In the case of picene-F4TCNQ we find switching ratios larger by one order of magnitude. Further, our calculations reveal that the picene-F4TCNQ system resembles remarkably well the I-V characteristics of a classical diode. The reverse-bias current of this molecular diode can be increased two orders of magnitude by an external gate voltage. Based on density-functional theory calculations we show that the hybrid states formed by the picene-F4TCNQ system play the key role in determining transport properties. We further conclude that the tuning of quantum transport properties through hybrid states is a general concept which opens a new route towards functional materials for molecular electronics.

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