posted on 2019-12-17, 19:33authored byHarry Ramanantoanina, Lynda Merzoud, Jules Tshishimbi Muya, Henry Chermette, Claude Daul
The electronic structure of Eu2+ compounds
results from
a complex combination of strongly correlated electrons and relativistic
effects as well as weak ligand–field interaction. There is
tremendous interest in calculating the electronic structure as nowadays
the Eu2+ ion is becoming more and more crucial, for instance,
in lighting technologies. Recently, interest in semiempirical methods
to qualitatively evaluate the electronic structure and to model the
optical spectra has gained popularity, although the theoretical methods
strongly rely upon empirical inputs, hindering their prediction capabilities.
Besides, ab initio multireference models are computationally heavy
and demand very elaborative theoretical background. Herein, application
of the ligand–field density functional theory (LFDFT) method
that is recently available in the Amsterdam Modeling Suite is shown:
(i) to elucidate the electronic structure properties on the basis
of the multiplet energy levels of Eu configurations 4f7 and 4f65d1 and (ii) to model the optical spectra
quite accurately if compared to the conventional time-dependent density
functional theory tool. We present a theoretical study of the molecular
Eu(η9-C9H9)2 complex
and its underlying photoluminescence properties with respect to the
Eu 4f–5d electron transitions. We model the excitation and
emission spectra with good agreement with the experiments, opening
up the possibility of modeling lanthanides in complex environment
like nanomaterials by means of LFDFT at much-reduced computational
resources and cost.