moiumuio 发表于 2025-7-19 17:20 If "relaxation excitation" means optimizing excited state, you may have a try. Also you can check higher-lying excited state. Using the IFCT function illustrated in Section 4.18.16 of Multiwfn manual, you can very easily obtain amount of charge transfer between two defined fragments, thereby very straightforwardly identifying the CT state of interest. |
本帖最后由 moiumuio 于 2025-7-19 18:05 编辑 sobereva 发表于 2025-7-19 05:12 Dear Prof., I have selected the first 5 states for studying. Usually, for dynamic PET (LUMO of Q instead of HOMO), the first or second state is the CT state, but I cannot see that with this. Are there any other ways to check that? I am pretending to do relaxation excitation, is it good to do that? Thank you. |
There are many possible reasons. For example, there are local excitation (LE) states on each fragment, and CT states corresponding electron transfer between the two fragments; if you only selected LE state to study, obviously you cannot observe electron transfer from e.g. hole-electron analysis or IFCT analysis in Multiwfn. |
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