Abstract

Molecular symmetry is vital to the selection rule of vibrationally resolved electronic transition, particularly when the nuclear dependence of electronic wave function is explicitly treated by including Franck-Condon (FC) factor, Franck-Condon/Herzberg-Teller (FC/HT) interference, and Herzberg-Teller (HT) coupling. Our present study investigated the light absorption spectra of highly symmetric tetracene, pentacene, and hexacene molecules of point-group D2h, as well as their monobrominated derivatives with a lower Cs symmetry. It was found that the symmetry-breaking monobromination allows more vibrational normal modes and their pairs to contribute to FC/HT interference and HT coupling, respectively. Through a projection of a molecule's vibrational normal modes to its irreducible representations, a linear relationship between the FC/HT intensity to the polyacene's size was deduced alongside a quadratic dependence of the HT intensity. Both theoretically derived correlations were well justified by our numerical simulations, which also demonstrated an approximately 20% improvement on the agreement with experimental line shape if the HT theory is adopted to replace the FC approximation. Moreover, for these low-symmetry monobrominated polyacenes, the FC intensity was even weaker than its FC/HT and HT counterparts at some excitation energies, making the HT theory imperative to decipher vibronic coupling, a fundamental driving force behind numerous chemical, biological, and photophysical processes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call