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Featured researches published by Tamar Stein.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Reliable Prediction of Charge Transfer Excitations in Molecular Complexes Using Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory

Tamar Stein; Leeor Kronik; Roi Baer

We show how charge transfer excitations at molecular complexes can be calculated quantitatively using time-dependent density functional theory. Predictive power is obtained from range-separated hybrid functionals using nonempirical tuning of the range-splitting parameter. Excellent performance of this approach is obtained for a series of complexes composed of various aromatic donors and the tetracyanoethylene acceptor, paving the way to systematic nonempirical quantitative studies of charge-transfer excitations in real systems.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2012

Excitation Gaps of Finite-Sized Systems from Optimally Tuned Range-Separated Hybrid Functionals

Leeor Kronik; Tamar Stein; Sivan Refaely-Abramson; Roi Baer

Excitation gaps are of considerable significance in electronic structure theory. Two different gaps are of particular interest. The fundamental gap is defined by charged excitations, as the difference between the first ionization potential and the first electron affinity. The optical gap is defined by a neutral excitation, as the difference between the energies of the lowest dipole-allowed excited state and the ground state. Within many-body perturbation theory, the fundamental gap is the difference between the corresponding lowest quasi-hole and quasi-electron excitation energies, and the optical gap is addressed by including the interaction between a quasi-electron and a quasi-hole. A long-standing challenge has been the attainment of a similar description within density functional theory (DFT), with much debate on whether this is an achievable goal even in principle. Recently, we have constructed and applied a new approach to this problem. Anchored in the rigorous theoretical framework of the generalized Kohn-Sham equation, our method is based on a range-split hybrid functional that uses exact long-range exchange. Its main novel feature is that the range-splitting parameter is not a universal constant but rather is determined from first principles, per system, based on satisfaction of the ionization potential theorem. For finite-sized objects, this DFT approach mimics successfully, to the best of our knowledge for the first time, the quasi-particle picture of many-body theory. Specifically, it allows for the extraction of both the fundamental and the optical gap from one underlying functional, based on the HOMO-LUMO gap of a ground-state DFT calculation and the lowest excitation energy of a linear-response time-dependent DFT calculation, respectively. In particular, it produces the correct optical gap for the difficult case of charge-transfer and charge-transfer-like scenarios, where conventional functionals are known to fail. In this perspective, we overview the formal and practical challenges associated with gap calculations, explain our new approach and how it overcomes previous difficulties, and survey its application to a variety of systems.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2009

PREDICTION OF CHARGE-TRANSFER EXCITATIONS IN COUMARIN-BASED DYES USING A RANGE-SEPARATED FUNCTIONAL TUNED FROM FIRST PRINCIPLES

Tamar Stein; Leeor Kronik; Roi Baer

We study the description of charge-transfer excitations in a series of coumarin-based donor-bridge-acceptor dyes. We show that excellent predictive power for the excitation energies and oscillator strengths in these systems is obtained by using a range-separated hybrid functional within the generalized Kohn-Sham approach to time-dependent density functional theory. Key to this success is a step for tuning the range separation parameter from first principles. We explore different methods for this tuning step, which are variants of a recently suggested approach for charge-transfer excitations [T. Stein et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 131, 2818 (2009)]. We assess the quality of prediction by comparing to excitation energies previously published for the same systems using the approximate coupled-cluster singles and doubles (CC2) method.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Fundamental gaps in finite systems from eigenvalues of a generalized Kohn-Sham method.

Tamar Stein; Helen R. Eisenberg; Leeor Kronik; Roi Baer


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2011

Charge-Transfer-Like π→π* Excitations in Time-Dependent Density Functional Theory: A Conundrum and Its Solution.

Natalia Kuritz; Tamar Stein; Roi Baer; Leeor Kronik


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2012

Curvature and Frontier Orbital Energies in Density Functional Theory

Tamar Stein; Jochen Autschbach; Niranjan Govind; Leeor Kronik; Roi Baer


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

Communication: Tailoring the optical gap in light-harvesting molecules

Andreas Karolewski; Tamar Stein; Roi Baer; Stephan Kümmel


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2012

Calculation of transition dipole moment in fluorescent proteins—towards efficient energy transfer

Tamar Ansbacher; Hemant Kumar Srivastava; Tamar Stein; Roi Baer; Maarten Merkx; Avital Shurki


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013

Curvature and frontier orbital energies in density functional theory

Leeor Kronik; Tamar Stein; Jochen Autschbach; Niranjan Govind; Roi Baer


Archive | 2009

Reliable Prediction of Charge Transfer Excitations in Molecular Complexes

Leeor Kronik; Tamar Stein; Roi Baer

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Roi Baer

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Leeor Kronik

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Jochen Autschbach

State University of New York System

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Niranjan Govind

Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory

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Avital Shurki

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Helen R. Eisenberg

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Hemant Kumar Srivastava

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Natalia Kuritz

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Tamar Ansbacher

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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