Abstract

Solvatochromic shifts of the electronic states of a chromophore can be used as a measure of solute-solvent interactions. The shifts of the electronic states of a model organic chromophore, p-nitroaniline (pNA), embedded in solvents with different polarities (water, 1,4-dioxane, and cyclohexane) are studied using a hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular-mechanics-type technique in which the chromophore is described by the configuration interaction singles with perturbative doubles (CIS(D)) method while the solvent is treated by the effective fragment potential (EFP) method. This newly developed CIS(D)/EFP scheme includes the quantum-mechanical coupling of the Coulomb and polarization terms; however, short-range dispersion and exchange-repulsion terms of EFP are not included in the quantum Hamiltonian. The CIS(D)/EFP model is benchmarked against the more accurate equation of motion coupled cluster with singles and doubles (EOM-CCSD)/EFP method on a set of small pNA-water clusters. CIS(D)/EFP accurately predicts the red solvatochromic shift of the charge-transfer π → π* state of pNA in polar water. The shift is underestimated in less polar dioxane and cyclohexane probably because of the omission of the explicit quantum-mechanical treatment of the short-range terms. Different solvation of singlet and triplet states of pNA results in different probabilities of intersystem crossing (ISC) and internal conversion (IC) pathways of energy relaxation in solvents of different polarity. Computed singlet-triplet splittings in water and dioxane qualitatively explain the active ISC channel in dioxane and predict almost no conversion to the triplet manifold in water, in agreement with experimental findings.

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