Determination of Two-Photon-Absorption Cross Sections
Using Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory Tight Binding: Application
to Fluorescent Protein Chromophores
posted on 2019-03-21, 00:00authored byMaria Rossano-Tapia, Alex Brown
Application
of fluorescent proteins (FPs), e.g., as probes for
biological imaging, has led to the goal of finding FPs with notable
one- and two-photon absorption (OPA and TPA, respectively) features.
The variables that affect the TPA cross section are many; e.g., structurally
speaking, some studies have shown its magnitude is influenced by the
presence of the protein backbone and the molecules of water surrounding
the chromophore. However, the impact that the surroundings have on
the TPA cross section has not been conclusively determined. One of
the main problems that can be faced when trying to account for excited
state properties is the cost associated with such computations. Among
the methods chosen for this type of computations is time-dependent
density functional theory (TD-DFT), commonly used on molecules with
no more than 50 atoms due to its computational cost. A cheaper alternative
to DFT and, moreover, to TD-DFT is the so-called time-dependent tight
binding density functional theory (TD-DFTB), which within the second-order
approximation is designated TD-DFTB2. In the present work, TD-DFTB2
was tested to determine whether or not it is an alternative method
to TD-DFT for computing excited state properties beyond excitation
energies and oscillator strengths such as TPA cross sections. Studies
around the performance of TD-DFTB2 on the computation of excitation
energies have been previously carried out, and the results show it
is comparable to TD-DFT in terms of the computation of excitation
energies and oscillator strengths. Despite the latter, what we found
is that neither the magnitude nor the trend of the obtained TPA cross
sections is preserved with respect to CAM-B3LYP and B3LYP TPA cross
sections previously reported by other authors. The computation of
TPA cross sections within the two-level model allowed us to determine
that among the reasons behind such behavior is the overestimation
of the excited state dipole moments. Based on the above, we conclude
that TD-DFTB2 is not (yet) a viable route to obtain quantitatively
TPA cross sections.