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Quasiparticle Self-Consistent GW-Bethe–Salpeter Equation Calculations for Large Chromophoric Systems

[Image: see text] The GW-Bethe–Salpeter equation (BSE) method is promising for calculating the low-lying excitonic states of molecular systems. However, so far it has only been applied to rather small molecules and in the commonly implemented diagonal approximations to the electronic self-energy, it...

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Autores principales: Förster, Arno, Visscher, Lucas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9648197/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36201788
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.2c00531
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author Förster, Arno
Visscher, Lucas
author_facet Förster, Arno
Visscher, Lucas
author_sort Förster, Arno
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] The GW-Bethe–Salpeter equation (BSE) method is promising for calculating the low-lying excitonic states of molecular systems. However, so far it has only been applied to rather small molecules and in the commonly implemented diagonal approximations to the electronic self-energy, it depends on a mean-field starting point. We describe here an implementation of the self-consistent and starting-point-independent quasiparticle self-consistent (qsGW)-BSE approach, which is suitable for calculations on large molecules. We herein show that eigenvalue-only self-consistency can lead to an unfaithful description of some excitonic states for chlorophyll dimers while the qsGW-BSE vertical excitation energies (VEEs) are in excellent agreement with spectroscopic experiments for chlorophyll monomers and dimers measured in the gas phase. Furthermore, VEEs from time-dependent density functional theory calculations tend to disagree with experimental values and using different range-separated hybrid (RSH) kernels does change the VEEs by up to 0.5 eV. We use the new qsGW-BSE implementation to calculate the lowest excitation energies of the six chromophores of the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center (RC) with nearly 2000 correlated electrons. Using more than 11,000 (6000) basis functions, the calculation could be completed in less than 5 (2) days on a single modern compute node. In agreement with previous TD-DFT calculations using RSH kernels on models that also do not include environmental effects, our qsGW-BSE calculations only yield states with local characters in the low-energy spectrum of the hexameric complex. Earlier works with RSH kernels have demonstrated that the protein environment facilitates the experimentally observed interchromophoric charge transfer. Therefore, future research will need to combine correlation effects beyond TD-DFT with an explicit treatment of environmental electrostatics.
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spelling pubmed-96481972022-11-15 Quasiparticle Self-Consistent GW-Bethe–Salpeter Equation Calculations for Large Chromophoric Systems Förster, Arno Visscher, Lucas J Chem Theory Comput [Image: see text] The GW-Bethe–Salpeter equation (BSE) method is promising for calculating the low-lying excitonic states of molecular systems. However, so far it has only been applied to rather small molecules and in the commonly implemented diagonal approximations to the electronic self-energy, it depends on a mean-field starting point. We describe here an implementation of the self-consistent and starting-point-independent quasiparticle self-consistent (qsGW)-BSE approach, which is suitable for calculations on large molecules. We herein show that eigenvalue-only self-consistency can lead to an unfaithful description of some excitonic states for chlorophyll dimers while the qsGW-BSE vertical excitation energies (VEEs) are in excellent agreement with spectroscopic experiments for chlorophyll monomers and dimers measured in the gas phase. Furthermore, VEEs from time-dependent density functional theory calculations tend to disagree with experimental values and using different range-separated hybrid (RSH) kernels does change the VEEs by up to 0.5 eV. We use the new qsGW-BSE implementation to calculate the lowest excitation energies of the six chromophores of the photosystem II (PSII) reaction center (RC) with nearly 2000 correlated electrons. Using more than 11,000 (6000) basis functions, the calculation could be completed in less than 5 (2) days on a single modern compute node. In agreement with previous TD-DFT calculations using RSH kernels on models that also do not include environmental effects, our qsGW-BSE calculations only yield states with local characters in the low-energy spectrum of the hexameric complex. Earlier works with RSH kernels have demonstrated that the protein environment facilitates the experimentally observed interchromophoric charge transfer. Therefore, future research will need to combine correlation effects beyond TD-DFT with an explicit treatment of environmental electrostatics. American Chemical Society 2022-10-06 2022-11-08 /pmc/articles/PMC9648197/ /pubmed/36201788 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.2c00531 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Förster, Arno
Visscher, Lucas
Quasiparticle Self-Consistent GW-Bethe–Salpeter Equation Calculations for Large Chromophoric Systems
title Quasiparticle Self-Consistent GW-Bethe–Salpeter Equation Calculations for Large Chromophoric Systems
title_full Quasiparticle Self-Consistent GW-Bethe–Salpeter Equation Calculations for Large Chromophoric Systems
title_fullStr Quasiparticle Self-Consistent GW-Bethe–Salpeter Equation Calculations for Large Chromophoric Systems
title_full_unstemmed Quasiparticle Self-Consistent GW-Bethe–Salpeter Equation Calculations for Large Chromophoric Systems
title_short Quasiparticle Self-Consistent GW-Bethe–Salpeter Equation Calculations for Large Chromophoric Systems
title_sort quasiparticle self-consistent gw-bethe–salpeter equation calculations for large chromophoric systems
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9648197/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36201788
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.2c00531
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