Abstract
Curcumin is a popular food additive around the world whose medicinal properties have been known since ancient times. The literature has recently highlighted several biological properties, but besides the health-related usages, its natural yellowish color may also be helpful for light-harvesting applications. This research aims to close a knowledge gap regarding the photophysical description of curcumin and its metallic complexes. We conducted benchmark experiments comparing NEVPT calculations with several DFT functionals (B3LYP, M06-L, M06-2X, CAM-B3LYP, and ωB97X-D) for describing the UV spectra of curcumin and its metallo-derivative, curcumin-copper(II). Once we determined the most suitable functional, we performed tests with different basis sets and conditions, such as solvation and redox state, to identify their impact on excited state properties. These results are also reported for the curcumin-zinc(II) derivative. We found that the accuracy of DFT functionals depends strongly on the nature of curcumin's excitations. Intra-ligand transitions dominate the absorption spectra of the complexes. Curcumin absorption is marginally affected by solvation and chelation, but when combined with redox processes, they may result in significant modifications. This is because copper cation changes its coordination geometry in response to redox conditions, changing the spectrum. We found that, compared to a NEVPT reference, B3LYP is the best functional for a general description of the compounds, despite not being appropriate for charge transfer transitions. M06-L was the best for LMCT transitions. However, compared with NEVPT2 and PNO-LCCSD(T)-F12 results, no functional achieved acceptable accuracy for MLCT transitions.
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