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Creators/Authors contains: "Giudetti, Goran"

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  1. ABSTRACT This study introduces a computational protocol for modeling the emission spectra of exciplexes using excited‐state ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations. The protocol is applied to a model exciplex formed by oligo‐p‐phenylenes (OPPs) and triethylamine (TEA), which is of interest in the context of photocatalytic reduction of . AIMD facilitates efficient sampling of the conformational space of OPP3 and OPP4 exciplexes with TEA, offering a dynamic alternative to previously employed static methods. The AIMD‐based protocol successfully reproduces experimental emission spectra for OPP‐TEA exciplexes, agreeing with previous computational and experimental findings. The results show that AIMD simulations provide an efficient means of sampling the conformational space of these exciplexes, requiring less user input and, in some instances, fewer computational resources than multiple excited‐state optimizations initiated from user‐specified initial structures. The study also evaluates the yield of intersystem crossing (ISC) using AIMD and Landau‐Zener probability. The results suggest that ISC is a minor decay channel for OPP3 and OPP4. This work provides new insights into the structural flexibility and emission characteristics of OPP‐TEA photoredox catalyst systems, potentially contributing to improved design strategies for organic chromophores in reduction applications. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 5, 2026
  2. We report high-level electronic structure calculations of electronic states in the miniSOG (for mini Singlet Oxygen Generator) photoactive protein designed to produce singlet oxygen upon light exposure. We consider a model system with a riboflavin (RF) chromophore. To better understand the photosensitization process, we compute relevant electronic states of the combined oxygen-chromophore system and their couplings. The calculations suggest that singlet oxygen can be produced both by inter-system crossing, via a triplet state of the RF(T1)×O2(3Σ− g ) character as well as by triplet excitation energy transfer via a singlet state of the same character. Importantly, the former channel produces O2(1Σ+ g ), an excited state of singlet oxygen, which is known to convert with unit efficiency into O2(1∆g) The calculations also provide evidence for the production of the triplet state of the chromophore via internal conversion facilitated by oxygen. Our results provide concrete support to previously hypothesized scenarios. 
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  3. The robustness of nickelocene’s (NiCp2, Cp = cyclopentadienyl) magnetic anisotropy and addressability of its spin states make this molecular magnet attractive as a spin sensor. However, microscopic understanding of its magnetic anisotropy is still lacking, especially when NiCp2 is deposited on a surface to make quantum sensing devices. Quantum chemical calculations of such molecule/solid-state systems are limited to density functional theory (DFT) or DFT+U (Hubbard correction to DFT). We investigate the magnetic behavior of NiCp2 using the spin-flip variant of the equation-of-motion coupled-cluster (EOM-SF-CC) method and use the EOM-SF-CC results to benchmark SF-TD-DFT. Our first-principle calculations agree well with experimentally derived magnetic anisotropy and susceptibility values. The calculations show that magnetic anisotropy in NiCp2 originates from a large spin–orbit coupling (SOC) between the triplet ground state and the third singlet state, whereas the coupling with lower singlet excited states is negligible. We also considered a set of six ring-substituted NiCp2 derivatives and a model system of the NiCp2/MgO(001) adsorption complex, for which we used SF-TD-DFT method. To gain insight into the electronic structure of these systems, we analyze spinless transition density matrices and their natural transition orbitals (NTOs). The NTO analysis of SOCs explains how spin states and magnetic properties are retained upon modification of the NiCp2 coordination environment and upon its adsorption on a surface. Such resilience of the NiCp2 magnetic behavior supports using NiCp2 as a spin-probe molecule by functionalization of the tip of a scanning tunneling microscope. 
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