4.2 Article

The highly excited-state manifold of guanine: calibration for nonlinear electronic spectroscopy simulations

Journal

THEORETICAL CHEMISTRY ACCOUNTS
Volume 137, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00214-018-2225-0

Keywords

Guanine; CASSCF/CASPT2; Nonlinear electronic spectroscopy; Purines; Electronic excited states; DNA/RNA

Funding

  1. European Research Council Advanced Grant STRATUS (ERC-AdG) [291198]
  2. French Agence National de la Recherche (FEMTO-2DNA) [ANR-15-CE29-0010]
  3. National Science Foundation [CHE-1663822]
  4. Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Bio-sciences division, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Office of Science, US Department of Energy [DE-FG02-04ER15571]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A computational protocol based on the complete and restricted active space self-consistent field (CASSCF/RASSCF) methods and their second-order perturbation theory extensions (CASPT2/RASPT2) is employed to benchmark the highly excited-state manifold of the DNA/RNA canonical purine nucleobase guanine in vacuo. Several RASPT2 schemes are tested, displaying a steady convergence of electronic transition energies and dipole moments upon active space enlargement toward the reference values. The outcome allows calibrating and optimizing computational efforts by considering cheaper and more approximate RAS schemes that could enable the characterization of the excited-state manifolds of multi-chromophoric systems, such as DNA/RNA nucleobase dimers or multimers. Simulations of two-dimensional electronic spectra show similar trends to those observed on the other purine nucleobase adenine, deviating from this and other pyrimidine nucleobases in featuring its main excited-state absorption signal, embodied by sizable double HOMO to LUMO excitation contributions, in the UV probing window.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available