Accurate Isomerization Enthalpy and Investigation of the Errors in Density Functional Theory for Dihydroazulene/Vinylheptafulvene Photochromism Using Diffusion Monte Carlo

Kayahan Saritas, Jeffrey C. Grossman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

We investigate the isomerization enthalpy of the dihydroazulene/vinylheptafulvene (DHA/VHF) molecular photoswitch system derivatives using electronic structure calculation methods including density functional theory (DFT), quantum Monte Carlo (QMC), and coupled cluster (CCSD(T)). Recent efforts have focused on tuning the isomerization enthalpy of the photoswitch for solar thermal energy storage applications using substitutional functional groups on its five- and seven-membered carbon rings, predominantly using DFT for the energy predictions. However, using the higher accuracy QMC and CCSD(T) methods, we show that in many cases DFT incorrectly predicts the isomerization enthalpy, and the errors depend on the functional groups substituted and the choice of the DFT functional. Isomerization of the DHA to VHF molecule is an electrocyclic ring-opening reaction on the five-membered ring of the DHA isomer. We find that the DFT errors are correlated to the electrocyclic ring-opening reactions of cyclobutene and cyclo-1,3-hexadiene, such that the DFT error changes monotonically with the size of the carbon ring, although QMC and CCSD(T) results are in a good agreement irrespective of the ring size. Using the QMC and CCSD(T) isomerization enthalpies, we predict gravimetric energy densities of the DHA derivatives for solar thermal storage applications. Our results show that suitable substitutions on DHA can yield gravimetric storage densities as large as 732 kJ/kg.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)26677-26685
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Physical Chemistry C
Volume121
Issue number48
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 7 2017
Externally publishedYes

Funding

Calculations were performed in part at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, which is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy and in part by the National Science Foundation through Teragrid resources provided by TACC.

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