Ultrafast Dynamics and Excited-State Trapping in [3.3]Paracyclophane

15 October 2025, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

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.

Keywords

Nonadiabatic molecular dynamics
Excited-state relaxation
Surface hopping
Charge resonance
Paracyclophane

Supplementary materials

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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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