Quantum nuclear and band-dispersion effects recover near-UV absorption in short-hydrogen-bonded organic crystals
Abstract
Near-UV optical absorption is increasingly reported in hydrogen-bonded organic and biomolecular materials lacking aromatic or extended pi-conjugated chromophores, yet its microscopic origin remains unresolved and electronic-structure calculations often overestimate experimental absorption onsets. Here, we combine machine-learned interatomic potentials for large-scale classical and quantum nuclear sampling with periodic excited-state calculations to address this discrepancy in L-pyroglutamine ammonium, an experimentally established glutamine-derived crystal containing a well-resolved short hydrogen bond and exhibiting non-aromatic near-UV optical response. Using controlled in silico ion substitutions that vary the surrounding hydrogen-bond environment while preserving this scaffold, we compute optical spectra from configurations sampled along classical and quantum nuclear trajectories using hybrid-functional time-dependent density functional theory. We show that nuclear quantum effects stabilise proton-sharing configurations that are strongly suppressed classically, redshifting the lowest bright excitations by 0.5-0.8 eV and raising the fraction of configurations with bright excitations below 6 eV from approximately 3% to approximately 30%. Explicit Brillouin-zone sampling provides a further, mechanistically distinct redshift of 0.5-1.1 eV, reflecting modest but significant indirect electronic character. Only when both effects are incorporated does the calculated onset recover the experimental 3.8-4.5 eV range. These results establish quantum proton fluctuations and reciprocal-space convergence as cooperative but physically distinct ingredients required for predictive optical spectroscopy of strongly hydrogen-bonded molecular materials.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.