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Creators/Authors contains: "Schatschneider, Bohdan"

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  1. Abstract The excited-state properties of molecular crystals are important for applications in organic electronic devices. TheGWapproximation and Bethe-Salpeter equation (GW+BSE) is the state-of-the-art method for calculating the excited-state properties of crystalline solids with periodic boundary conditions. We present the PAH101 dataset ofGW+BSE calculations for 101 molecular crystals of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) with up to  ~500 atoms in the unit cell. To the best of our knowledge, this is the firstGW+BSE dataset for molecular crystals. The data records include theGWquasiparticle band structure, the fundamental band gap, the static dielectric constant, the first singlet exciton energy (optical gap), the first triplet exciton energy, the dielectric function, and optical absorption spectra for light polarized along the three lattice vectors. The dataset can be used to (i) discover materials with desired electronic/optical properties, (ii) identify correlations between DFT andGW+BSE quantities, and (iii) train machine learned models to help in materials discovery efforts. 
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  2. The excited-state properties of molecular crystals are important for applications in organic electronic devices. The GW approximation and Bethe-Salpeter equation (GW+BSE) is the state-of-the-art method for calculating the excited-state properties of crystalline solids with periodic boundary conditions. We present the PAH101 dataset of GW +BSE calculations for 101 molecular crystals of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) with up to ∼500 atoms in the unit cell. The data records include the GW quasiparticle band structure, the fundamental band gap, the static dielectric constant, the first singlet exciton energy (optical gap), the first triplet exciton energy, the dielectric function, and optical absorption spectra for light polarized along the three lattice vectors. In addition, the dataset includes the density functional theory (DFT) single-molecule and crystal features used in Liu et al. [npj Computational Materials, 8, 70 (2022)]. We envision the dataset being used to (i) identify correlations between DFT and GW +BSE quantities, (ii) discover materials with desired electronic/ optical properties in the dataset itself, and (iii) train machine-learned models to help in materials discovery efforts. We provide examples to illustrate these three use cases. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 11, 2025
  3. The excited-state properties of molecular crystals are important for applications in organic electronic devices. The GW approximation and Bethe-Salpeter equation (GW +BSE) is the state-of-the-art method for calculating the excited-state properties of crystalline solids with periodic boundary conditions. We present the PAH101 dataset of GW +BSE calculations for 101 molecular crystals of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) with up to ∼500 atoms in the unit cell. The data records include the GW quasiparticle band structure, the fundamental band gap, the static dielectric constant, the first singlet exciton energy (optical gap), the first triplet exciton energy, the dielectric function, and optical absorption spectra for light polarized along the three lattice vectors. In addition, the dataset includes the density functional theory (DFT) single-molecule and crystal features used in Liu et al. [npj Computational Materials, 8, 70 (2022)]. We envision the dataset being used to (i) identify correlations between DFT and GW +BSE quantities, (ii) discover materials with desired electronic/ optical properties in the dataset itself, and (iii) train machine-learned models to help in materials discovery efforts. We provide examples to illustrate these three use cases. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 10, 2025
  4. Singlet fission (SF) is a photophysical process considered as a possible scheme to bypass the Shockley–Queisser limit by generating two triplet-state excitons from one high-energy photon. Polyacene crystals, such as tetracene and pentacene, have shown outstanding SF performance both theoretically and experimentally. However, their instability prevents them from being utilized in SF-based photovoltaic devices. In search of practical SF chromophores, we use many-body perturbation theory within the GW approximation and Bethe–Salpeter equation to study the excitonic properties of a family of pyrene-stabilized acenes. We propose a criterion to define the convergence of exciton wave-functions with respect to the fine k-point grid used in the BerkeleyGW code. An open-source Python code is presented to perform exciton wave-function convergence checks and streamline the double Bader analysis of exciton character. We find that the singlet excitons in pyrene-stabilized acenes have a higher degree of charge transfer character than in the corresponding acenes. The pyrene-fused tetracene and pentacene derivatives exhibit comparable excitation energies to their corresponding acenes, making them potential SF candidates. The pyrene-stabilized anthracene derivative is considered as a possible candidate for triplet–triplet annihilation because it yields a lower SF driving force than anthracene. 
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