posted on 2024-02-22, 18:44authored bySebastian
V. Pios, Maxim F. Gelin, Arif Ullah, Pavlo O. Dral, Lipeng Chen
Time-resolved
spectroscopy is an important tool for unraveling
the minute details of structural changes in molecules of biological
and technological significance. The nonlinear femtosecond signals
detected for such systems must be interpreted, but it is a challenging
task for which theoretical simulations are often indispensable. Accurate
simulations of transient absorption or two-dimensional electronic
spectra are, however, computationally very expensive, prohibiting
the wider adoption of existing first-principles methods. Here, we
report an artificial-intelligence-enhanced protocol to drastically
reduce the computational cost of simulating nonlinear time-resolved
electronic spectra, which makes such simulations affordable for polyatomic
molecules of increasing size. The protocol is based on the doorway–window
approach for the on-the-fly surface-hopping simulations. We show its
applicability for the prototypical molecule of pyrazine for which
it produces spectra with high precision with respect to ab
initio reference while cutting the computational cost by
at least 95% compared to pure first-principles simulations.