@article{OncakWlodarczykSauer2016, author = {Oncak, Milan and Wlodarczyk, Radoslaw and Sauer, Joachim}, title = {Hydration Structures of MgO, CaO, and SrO (001) Surfaces}, series = {The journal of physical chemistry : C, Nanomaterials and interfaces}, volume = {120}, journal = {The journal of physical chemistry : C, Nanomaterials and interfaces}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, address = {Washington}, issn = {1932-7447}, doi = {10.1021/acs.jpcc.6b07434}, pages = {24762 -- 24769}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Using density functional theory (PBE functional), we show that the degree of surface hydroxylation increases in the MgO, CaO, SrO series, accompanied by an increase in water adsorption energy. Already for water coverage of two monolayers, structures with dissolved M2+. ions are considerably more stable than the intact, nondissolved surface. The dissolved ions above the surface form different patterns including ordered ones (e.g., an infinite stripe) that are preferred for MgO(001) and CaO(001) and disordered ones that are favored for SrO(001). Contrary to previous assignments, an analysis of calculated X-ray photoelectron spectra shows that O(1s) signals arising from OH and H2O groups might coincide in the experimental spectrum.}, language = {en} } @article{KuleszaTitovDalyetal.2016, author = {Kulesza, Alexander Jan and Titov, Evgenii and Daly, Steven and Wlodarczyk, Radoslaw and Megow, J{\"o}rg and Saalfrank, Peter and Choi, Chang Min and MacAleese, Luke and Antoine, Rodolphe and Dugourd, Philippe}, title = {Excited States of Xanthene Analogues: Photofragmentation and Calculations by CC2 and Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory}, series = {ChemPhysChem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry}, volume = {17}, journal = {ChemPhysChem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1439-4235}, doi = {10.1002/cphc.201600650}, pages = {3129 -- 3138}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Action spectroscopy has emerged as an analytical tool to probe excited states in the gas phase. Although comparison of gas-phase absorption properties with quantum-chemical calculations is, in principle, straightforward, popular methods often fail to describe many molecules of interest-such as xanthene analogues. We, therefore, face their nano-and picosecond laser-induced photofragmentation with excited-state computations by using the CC2 method and time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT). Whereas the extracted absorption maxima agree with CC2 predictions, the TDDFT excitation energies are blueshifted. Lowering the amount of Hartree-Fock exchange in the DFT functional can reduce this shift but at the cost of changing the nature of the excited state. Additional bandwidth observed in the photofragmentation spectra is rationalized in terms of multiphoton processes. Observed fragmentation from higher-lying excited states conforms to intense excited-to-excited state transitions calculated with CC2. The CC2 method is thus suitable for the comparison with photofragmentation in xanthene analogues.}, language = {en} }