Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (14)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (14)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (14)
Keywords
- Theoretische Chemie (14) (remove)
The first part of this work focuses on the characterization of systems which complex electronic structures require the application of multi-reference methods. The anti-tumor efficacy of the natural product Neocarzinostatin is based on the formation of diradicals and causes DNA cleavage and finally cytolysis. Computations on model systems performed in the present work show the influence of structural features on the mode of action and the efficacy of this antitumor-antibiotic. The cyclization of systems related to the enyne-cumulene framework like the enyne-allenes was investigated earlier and relations to the more unusual class of enyne-ketenes are analyzed. The class of enyne-ketenes (and also the enyne-allenes) show a broad spectrum of possible intermediates (diradicals, zwitterions, allenes). The electronic structures of these intermediates are also possible for the (heteroatom substituted) 1,2,4-cyclohexatriene and a model for their energetic sequence based on high-level multi-reference computations is proposed. In all three projects the application of multi-reference approaches is necessary to obtain a comprehensive picture of the reactivity and electronic structure but also shows up the limits inherently existing in the currently available programs with respect to the size of the molecules. In the second part, algorithms for a multi-reference Moller-Plesset perturbation theory (MR-MP2) program, designed to perform large-scale computations, were developed and implemented. The MR-MP2 approach represents the most cost-effective multireference ansatz and requires an efficient evaluation of the Hamilton matrix for which an algorithm is designed to instantly recognize only non-vanishing matrix elements and to employ the recurring interaction patterns of the Hamilton matrix. The direct construction of the Hamilton matrix is additionally parallelized to work on cluster environments.
Die vorliegende Dissertation behandelt zum einen die mechanistischen Details von Bindungsaktivierungs-Reaktionen an Disauerstoff und weißem Phosphor mit den Komplexfragmenten 1[Ni(iPr2Im)2] und 3[(η5-C5H5)Co(iPr2Im)] und zum anderen die Regioselektivität von oxidativen Insertionsreaktionen des 1[Ni(iPr2Im)2]-Komplexfragments in C–X-Bindungen substituierter Fluoraromaten (X = F, OCH3, CN, H).
Part 1 of this work describes the development of accurate physically grounded force fields for
intermolecular Cation-π interactions based on SAPT energy decomposition analysis.
The presented results demonstrate the benefits of the used DFT-SAPT method to describe non-bonding
interactions. First of all, this method is able to reproduce the high level CCSD(T) energy values
but using much less computational time. Second it provides the possibility to separate the total
intermolecular interaction energy into several physically meaningful contributions. The relative
contributions of the dimers investigated can be seen in Fig. 6.16. In Tab. 6.3 the percentage
contribution of the attractive energy parts to the stabilization energy is shown. The polarization
energy is important for the NH+...C6H6 interaction, whereas it becomes less crucial
considering other dimers. The dispersion energy contribution is large in the case of
the C6H6...H2O dimers, whereas it is relatively less important for the NH+...C6H6
interaction. The electrostatic energy contributes a large amount of stabilizing energy
in all considered dimer interactions. ...
This work presents excited state investigations on several systems with respect to experimental
spectroscopic work. The majority of projects covers the temporal evolution of
excitations in thin films of organic semiconductor materials. In the first chapters, thinfilm
and interface systems are build from diindeno[1,2,3-cd:1’,2’,3’-lm]perylene (DIP)
and N,N’-bis-(2-ethylhexyl)-dicyanoperylene-3,4:9,10-bis(dicarboximide) (PDIR-CN2)
layers, in the third chapter bulk systems consist of 4,4’,4”-tris[(3-methylphenyl)phenylamino]
triphenylamine (m-MTDATA), 4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline (BPhen) and
tris-(2,4,6-trimethyl-3-(pyridin-3-yl)phenyl)borane (3TPYMB). These were investigated
by aggregate-based calculations. Careful selection of methods and incorporation
of geometrical relaxation and environmental effects allows for a precise energetical assignment
of excitations. The biggest issue was a proper description of charge-transfer
excitations, which was resolved by the application of ionization potential tuning on
aggregates. Subsequent characterization of excitations and their interplay condenses
the picture. Therefore, we could assign important features of the experimental spectroscopic
data and explain differences between systems.
The last chapter in this work covers the analysis of single molecule spectroscopy on
methylbismut. This poses different challenges for computations, such as multi-reference
character of low-lying excitations and an intrinsic need for a relativistic description.
We resolved this by combining complete active space self-consistent field based methods
with scalarrelativistic density-functional theory. Thus we were able to confidently
assign the spectroscopic features and explain underlying processes.