Updated: New Inorganic Emitters for Phosphorescent LEDs on Frontispiece of Advanced Materials

Richard Lunt’s group in the MSU Dept. of Chemical Engineering has developed a new class of LEDs based on hexanuclear metal halide clusters.  These clusters exhibit a broad emission spectrum which we attribute to an unusually strong Jahn-Teller distortion in the excited state which arises from the existence of both global (whole cluster) and local (immediate neighborhood of each metal atom) symmetry in the clusters.  Check it out.

Update:  This work is on the frontispiece of Advanced Materials!

Updated: Congratulations To Scott and Garrett!!!

Congratulations to Scott and Garrett, who respectively won best student talk and best poster awards at this weekend’s Midwest Theoretical Chemistry Conference in Ann Arbor!  Scott’s talk was on our GPU-accelerated strategy for optimizing conical intersections in nanomaterials, and Garrett’s poster was on some charge transport in graphitic carbon nitride photocatalysts.  Great job, guys!

Update: The College of Natural Sciences has posted a news story of Scott and Garrett’s awards.

Levine Group at MWTCC

If you will be at the Midwest Theoretical Chemistry Conference this coming weekend in Ann Arbor, make sure that you see Scott’s talk on Saturday morning on his work developing GPU accelerated CASCI methods for studying non-radiative processes in nanoscale systems.  Also check out Garrett and Wei-Tao’s posters.

Levine Group at ACS Denver

Please come check out the symposium titled “Modeling Excited States of Complex Systems,” organized by Ben and Prof. Sergey Varganov of University of Nevada at Reno.  It will run all week, with a total of 32 invited speakers.  Many thanks to the PHYS division for their support!  Ben will not be in attendance for personal reasons, but he hopes everyone will have a great time!

Also, two Levine group members will be presenting talks:  Scott will present his work on the GPU acceleration of Full/CAS CI in the above mentioned symposium, while Garrett will present his work on the norm-preserving interpolation (NPI) approach to computing time-derivative couplings in the dynamics symposium (also in PHYS).  Make sure you check them out!

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