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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Nonradiative Deactivation Mechanisms of Uracil, Thymine, and 5-Fluorouracil: A Comparative ab Initio Study.

The mechanisms of the ultrafast nonradiative deactivation of uracil and its substituted derivatives thymine (5-methyluracil) and 5-fluorouracil after absorption of UV light are explored and compared by means of ab initio multistate (MS) CASPT2 calculations. The MS-CASPT2 method is applied for the calculation of potential energy profiles, especially for the geometry optimization in the electronically excited state, with the aim of an accurate prediction of deactivation pathways. The resulting energy curves of each molecule exhibit that the conical intersection between the (1)ππ* and ground states is accessible via small energy barriers from the minimum in the (1)ππ* state as well as from that in the (1)nπ* state. The barrier of 5-fluorouracil in the (1)ππ* state is calculated to be definitely higher than those of uracil and thymine, which is consistent with experiments and suggests that the elongation of the excited-state lifetime of uracil by fluorine substitution is significantly contributed from intrinsic electronic effect of the molecule. However, no evidence of the experimentally observed longer excited-state lifetime of thymine than uracil is found in the presently calculated MS-CASPT2 potential energy curves in the (1)ππ* and (1)nπ* states, implying nonnegligible contribution of other factors such as solvation effect and substituent mass to the photoinduced dynamics of uracil derivatives.[1]

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