Issue 30, 2024

Electron–vibrational renormalization in fullerenes through ab initio and machine learning methods

Abstract

The effect of nuclear vibrations on the electronic eigenvalues and the HOMO–LUMO gap is known for several kinds of carbon-based materials, like diamond, diamondoids, carbon nanoclusters, carbon nanotubes and others, like hydrogen-terminated oligoynes and polyyne. However, it has not been widely analysed in another remarkable kind which presents both theoretical and technological interest: fullerenes. In this article we present the study of the HOMO, LUMO and gap renormalizations due to zero-point motion of a relatively large number (163) of fullerenes and fullerene derivatives. We have calculated this renormalization using density-functional theory with the frozen-phonon method, finding that it is non-negligible (above 0.1 eV) for systems with relevant technological applications in photovoltaics and that the strength of the renormalization increases with the size of the gap. In addition, we have applied machine learning methods for classification and regression of the renormalizations, finding that they can be approximately predicted using the output of a computationally cheap ground state calculation. Our conclusions are supported by recent research in other systems.

Graphical abstract: Electron–vibrational renormalization in fullerenes through ab initio and machine learning methods

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Feb 2024
Accepted
10 Jun 2024
First published
18 Jun 2024

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2024,26, 20310-20324

Electron–vibrational renormalization in fullerenes through ab initio and machine learning methods

P. García-Risueño, E. Armengol, À. García-Cerdaña, J. M. García-Lastra and D. Carrasco-Busturia, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2024, 26, 20310 DOI: 10.1039/D4CP00632A

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