Abstract

The ground- and first excited state of s-tetrazine arising from a π*←n excitation (1Ag,1B3u) have been studied using the complete active space (CASSCF) and the second order multiconfiguration perturbation theory (CASPT2) ab initio methods. The focus of this study is on the effect of the electronic excitation on the molecular structure and on those electronic properties which are important to model the solvatochromatic behavior of the molecule in polymer matrices as used in permanent hole burning experiments. Since the accurate computation of excited state molecular properties represents a major challenge for today’s numerical quantum chemistry, some technical aspects are also considered. The present study shows that the change in geometry upon electronic excitation is small. This is in partial contradiction with the experimental studies which however disagree among themselves [see K. K. Innes, I. G. Ross, and W. R. Moomaw, J. Mol. Spectrosc. 132, 492 (1988), and R. E. Smalley, L. Wharton, and D. H. Levi, ibid. 66, 375 (1977)]. This study also confirms that the first excited state equilibrium structure is of D2h symmetry. In an earlier theoretical study it was found that the D2h symmetry structure may represent a saddle point rather than a minimum on the excited state potential surface [see A. C. Scheiner and H. F. Schaefer III, J. Chem. Phys. 87, 3539 (1987)]. In the first excited state, we observe an increase of the mean polarizability of s-tetrazine along with an enhanced anisotropy. The change in the polarizability is almost exclusively in the ‘‘in-plane’’ components of the tensor; the polarizability in the vertical direction is nearly unchanged. This observation questions recent experimental results reported for this molecule [see S. Heitz, D. Weidnauer, and A. Hese, J. Chem. Phys. 95, 7952 (1991)].

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