Abstract
Paracyclophanes are rigid, three-dimensional frameworks in which two benzene rings are held in a parallel, stacked arrangement by short aliphatic linkers. Their derivatives display pronounced through-space π–π interactions that strongly influence their excited-state behavior. Here we investigate the ultrafast excited-state dynamics of [3.3]Paracyclophane ([3.3]PCP) using time-dependent density functional theory combined with nonadiabatic molecular dynamics based on surface hopping. The 2-ps simulations provide a detailed picture of how electronic and nuclear motions evolve in concert after photoexcitation. Following excitation to the bright S₃ state, [3.3]PCP rapidly relaxes into S₁, where it becomes kinetically trapped. Analysis of the fragment-based transition density matrix reveals a concurrent transformation of the electronic structure—from an excitonic-resonance state with minor charge-transfer (CT) character (≈0.2) to a mixed excitonic/charge-resonance regime with CT ≈0.5. This evolution is accompanied by a structural contraction of the π-stack, as the two benzene rings approach each other, activating an inter-ring breathing motion that governs the subsequent dynamics. Because [3.3]PCP combines rapid nonadiabatic relaxation with long-lived excited-state trapping, it serves as a particularly demanding benchmark for trajectory-based dynamics methods, offering both a mechanistic picture of excimer formation and a stringent test of their current capabilities.
Supplementary materials
Title
Electronic supporting information
Description
Simulated IR spectrum, additional surface hopping results, internal conversion energy pathway, and Cartesian coordinates of minima and intersection point have been included in the ESI.
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