Journal of Chemical Physics, Vol.112, No.6, 2798-2809, 2000
A theoretical study of the B-1(2u) and B-1(1u) vibronic bands in benzene
The two lowest bands, B-1(2u) and B-1(1u), of the electronic spectrum of the benzene molecule have been studied theoretically using a new method to compute vibronic excitation energies and intensities. The complete active space (CAS) self-contained field (SCF) method (with six active pi-orbitals) was used to compute harmonic force field for the ground state and the B-1(2u) and B-1(1u) electronic states. A linear approximation has been used for the transition dipole as a function of the nuclear displacement coordinates. Derivatives of the transition dipole were computed using a variant of the CASSCF state interaction method. Multiconfigurational second-order perturbation theory (CASPT2) was used to obtain absolute excitation energies (12 active pi-orbitals). The results show that the approach works well. Vibrational progressions are well described in both bands and intensities, and energies are in agreement with experiment, in particular when CASPT2 derived geometries are used. One interesting result is that computed vertical energies fall about 0.1 eV on the high energy side of the band maximum.