- Vibronic coupling in asymmetric bichromophores: theory and application to diphenylmethane.
Vibronic coupling in asymmetric bichromophores: theory and application to diphenylmethane.
The theory for modeling vibronic interactions in bichromophores was introduced in sixties by Witkowski and Moffitt [J. Chem. Phys. 33, 872 (1960)] and extended by Fulton and Gouterman [J. Chem. Phys. 35, 1059 (1961)]. The present work describes extension of this vibronic model to describe bichromophores with broken vibrational symmetry such as partly deuterated molecules. Additionally, the model is extended to include inter-chromophore vibrational modes. The model can treat multiple vibrational modes by employing Lanczos diagonalization procedure of sparse matrices. The developed vibronic model is applied to simulation of vibronic spectra of flexible bichromophore diphenylmethane and compared to high-resolution experimental spectra [J. A. Stearns, N. R. Pillsbury, K. O. Douglass, C. W. Müller, T. S. Zwier, and D. F. Plusquellic, J. Chem. Phys. 129, 224305 (2008)].