Liam Wilbraham
PSL Research University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Liam Wilbraham.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015
Liam Wilbraham; Marika Savarese; Nadia Rega; Carlo Adamo; Ilaria Ciofini
The excited state intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT) reaction taking place within 2-(2-hydroxyphenyl)benzoxazole (HBT) and two recently experimentally characterized napthalimide derivatives-known as N-1 and N-4-has been investigated in order to identify and test a possible protocol for the description and complete mechanistic and electronic characterization of the reaction at the excited state. This protocol is based on density functional theory, time-dependent density functional theory, and a recently proposed electron density based index (DCT). This method is able to identify all stable species involved in the reaction, discriminate between possible reaction pathways over potential energy surfaces (PES), which are intrinsically very flat and difficult to characterize, and quantitatively measure the excited state charge transfer character throughout the reaction. The photophysical properties of the molecules (i.e., absorption and emission wavelength) are also quantitatively determined via the implicit inclusion of solvent effects in the case of toluene and, the more polar, tetrahydrofuran. The accuracy obtained with this protocol then opens up the possibility of the ab initio design of molecules exhibiting ESIPT for tailored applications such as highly selective molecular sensors.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017
Liam Wilbraham; Pragya Verma; Donald G. Truhlar; Laura Gagliardi; Ilaria Ciofini
The spin-state orderings in nine Fe(II) and Fe(III) complexes with ligands of diverse ligand-field strength were investigated with multiconfiguration pair-density functional theory (MC-PDFT). The performance of this method was compared to that of complete active space second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2) and Kohn-Sham density functional theory. We also investigated the dependence of CASPT2 and MC-PDFT results on the size of the active-space. MC-PDFT reproduces the CASPT2 spin-state ordering, the dependence on the ligand field strength, and the dependence on active space at a computational cost that is significantly reduced as compared to CASPT2.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2018
Reiner Sebastian Sprick; Catherine M. Aitchison; Enrico Berardo; Lukas Turcani; Liam Wilbraham; Ben Alston; Kim E. Jelfs; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg; Andrew I. Cooper
The hydrogen evolution activity of a polymeric photocatalyst was maximised by co-polymerisation, using both experimental and computational screening, for a family of 1,4-phenylene/2,5-thiophene co-polymers. The photocatalytic activity is the product of multiple material properties that are affected in different ways by the polymer composition and microstructure. For the first time, the photocatalytic activity was shown to be a function of the arrangement of the building blocks in the polymer chain as well as the overall composition. The maximum in hydrogen evolution for the co-polymer series appears to result from a trade-off between the fraction of light absorbed and the thermodynamic driving force for proton reduction and sacrificial electron donor oxidation, with the co-polymer of p-terphenyl and 2,5-thiophene showing the highest activity.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2018
Liam Wilbraham; Carlo Adamo; Ilaria Ciofini
The computationally assisted, accelerated design of inorganic functional materials often relies on the ability of a given electronic structure method to return the correct electronic ground state of the material in question. Outlining difficulties with current density functionals and wave function-based approaches, we highlight why double hybrid density functionals represent promising candidates for this purpose. In turn, we show that PBE0-DH (and PBE-QIDH) offers a significant improvement over its hybrid parent functional PBE0 [as well as B3LYP* and coupled cluster singles and doubles with perturbative triples (CCSD(T))] when computing spin-state splitting energies, using high-level diffusion Monte Carlo calculations as a reference. We refer to the opposing influence of Hartree-Fock (HF) exchange and MP2, which permits higher levels of HF exchange and a concomitant reduction in electronic density error, as the reason for the improved performance of double-hybrid functionals relative to hybrid functionals. Additionally, using 16 transition metal (Fe and Co) complexes, we show that low-spin states are stabilised by increasing contributions from MP2 within the double hybrid formulation. Furthermore, this stabilisation effect is more prominent for high field strength ligands than low field strength ligands.
Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2018
Liam Wilbraham; Enrico Berardo; Lukas Turcani; Kim E. Jelfs; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg
We propose a general high-throughput virtual screening approach for the optical and electronic properties of conjugated polymers. This approach makes use of the recently developed xTB family of low-computational-cost density functional tight-binding methods from Grimme and co-workers, calibrated here to (Time-Dependent) Density Functional Theory ((TD)DFT) data computed for a representative diverse set of (co)polymers. Parameters drawn from the resulting calibration using a linear model can then be applied to the xTB derived results for new polymers, thus generating near DFT-quality data with orders of magnitude reduction in computational cost. As a result, after an initial computational investment for calibration, this approach can be used to quickly and accurately screen on the order of thousands of polymers for target applications. We also demonstrate that the (opto)electronic properties of the conjugated polymers show only a very minor variation when considering different conformers and that the results of high-throughput screening are therefore expected to be relatively insensitive with respect to the conformer search methodology applied.
Advanced Materials | 2018
Liam Wilbraham; Marine Louis; Domenico Alberga; Arnaud Brosseau; Régis Guillot; Fuyuki Ito; Frédéric Labat; Rémi Métivier; Clémence Allain; Ilaria Ciofini
Mechanofluorochromic molecular materials display a change in fluorescence color through mechanical stress. Complex structure-property relationships in both the crystalline and amorphous phases of these materials govern both the presence and strength of this behavior, which is usually deemed the result of a mechanically induced phase transition. However, the precise nature of the emitting species in each phase is often a matter of speculation, resulting from experimental data that are difficult to interpret, and a lack of an acceptable theoretical model capable of capturing complex environmental effects. With a combined strategy using sophisticated experimental techniques and a new theoretical approach, here the varied mechanofluorochromic behavior of a series of difluoroboron diketonates is shown to be driven by the formation of low-energy exciton traps in the amorphous phase, with a limited number of traps giving rise to the full change in fluorescence color. The results highlight intrinsic structural links between crystalline and amorphous phases, and how these may be exploited for further development of powerful mechanofluorochromic assemblies, in line with modern crystal engineering approaches.
Coordination Chemistry Reviews | 2015
Carlo Adamo; Tangui Le Bahers; Marika Savarese; Liam Wilbraham; Gregorio García; Ryoichi Fukuda; Masahiro Ehara; Nadia Rega; Ilaria Ciofini
Faraday Discussions | 2015
Sylviane Chevreux; Clémence Allain; Liam Wilbraham; Keitaro Nakatani; Patrice Jacques; Ilaria Ciofini; Gilles Lemercier
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2017
Davide Presti; Liam Wilbraham; Cecilia Targa; Frédéric Labat; Alfonso Pedone; Maria Cristina Menziani; Ilaria Ciofini; Carlo Adamo
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2016
Liam Wilbraham; Carlo Adamo; Frédéric Labat; Ilaria Ciofini