I have some new findings regarding my pi-stack structures...they are quite elastic. That means they have small energy barriers against phonon movement, but have stable structures consisting of equal inter-ring distances.
The method I used to deduct this was to perform calculations using GAUSSIAN03 with the same models I am discussing here. As before, I have a periodic box for the arenes, with room for two molecules. This supercell allows me to simulate phonon modes in pi-stack arrays. The method I use for generating these phonons is shown below:
When the phonon is mediated by the arenes, the energy levels take on a parabolic dispersion curve! The origin of this curve is the nonlinearity of molecular orbital energies relative to inter-ring distances. The phonon produces two different inter-ring distances in the array, X1 and X2. X1, the shorter distance, produces much smaller HOMO-LUMO separations than X2, the longer distance, does. The rate of change towards X1 is greater than that towards X2 during the phonon movement. Thus, I have a finite effective mass for phonon-mediated transport through pi-stacks. The dispersion curve example I attached is for fluorobenzene, a typical example. I have observed this feature for many arenes and heterocycles. I can change where the dispersion curve goes by adding ionic functional groups to the rings, inducing antiaromaticity in the molecules, making the molecules radicals, or turning the molecules into pairs of cation/anion heterocycles. Elemental substitution, neutral functional groups, and mixing neutral species do not affect the direction of the typical dispersion curve, but they do change effective masses and initial molecular orbital energies.
Elasticity in lattices is essential for phonon-electron interactions, and since I have band gap narrowing under phonon movement, the array is not stable towards local dimer formation. This means that the phonon must leave the array somehow, once it has entered the system. It is not trapped efficiently by the arenes, because the energy variation is simply too small. Calculations using statistical thermodynamics have shown that the average temperature required for a 0.2 angstrom disturbance is well below 100 kelvins for most arene or heterocycle arrays. I have also verified the quality of fit for the parabolic curves using student t-test methods, showing that the dE2/dk2 term and hence effective mass obtained from it are very statistically significant.
What is your take on these findings? I feel that they do explain previous findings done with DNA, which one of the molecules I tested is a good nucleobase mimic.