Excitation and relaxation energies of trans-stilbene: Confined singlet, triplet, and charged bipolarons

Z. G. Soos, S. Ramasesha, D. S. Galvão, and S. Etemad
Phys. Rev. B 47, 1742 – Published 15 January 1993
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Abstract

The π-electronic excitations and excited-state geometries of trans-stilbene (tS) are found by combining exact solutions of the Pariser-Parr-Pople (PPP) model and semiempirical Parametric Method 3 (PM3) calculations. Comprehensive comparisons with tS spectra are obtained and related to the fluorescence and topological alternation of poly(paraphenylenevinylene) (PPV). The one-photon absorption and triplet of tS correspond, respectively, to singlet and triplet bipolarons confined to two phenyls, while the tS2 ground state is a confined charged bipolaron. Independent estimates of the relaxation energy between vertical and adiabatic excitation show the bipolaron binding energy to depend on both charge and spin, as expected for interacting π electrons in correlated or molecular states. Complete configuration interaction within the PPP model of tS accounts for the singlet-triplet gap, for the fine-structure constants and triplet-triplet spectra, for two-photon transitions and intensities, and for one-photon spectra and the radiative lifetime, although the relative position of nearly degenerate covalent and ionic singlets is not resolved. The planar PM3 geometry and low rotational barrier of tS agree with resolved rotational and vibrational spectra in molecular beams. PM3 excitation and relaxation energies for tS bipolarons are consistent with experiment and with PPP results. Instead of the exciton model, we interpret tS excitations in terms of states that are localized on each ring or extended over an alternating chain, as found exactly in Hückel theory, and find nearly degenerate transitions between extended and localized states in the singlet, triplet, and dianion manifolds. The large topological alternation of the extended system increases the ionicity and interchanges the order of the lowest one- and two-photon absorption of PPV relative to polyenes.

  • Received 31 July 1992

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.47.1742

©1993 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Z. G. Soos

  • Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544

S. Ramasesha

  • Department of Chemistry, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544
  • Solid State and Structural Chemistry Unit, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 560012, India

D. S. Galvão

  • Bell Communications Research, Red Bank, New Jersey 07701
  • Departamento de Fisica Aplicada, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, 13081 Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil

S. Etemad

  • Bell Communications Research, Red Bank, New Jersey 07701

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Vol. 47, Iss. 4 — 15 January 1993

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