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Chantal Daniel

Researcher at University of Strasbourg

Publications -  143
Citations -  4524

Chantal Daniel is an academic researcher from University of Strasbourg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Excited state & Ab initio. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 139 publications receiving 3957 citations. Previous affiliations of Chantal Daniel include IBM & Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

Papers
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Spin-Vibronic Mechanism for Intersystem Crossing

TL;DR: The theory and fundamental principles of the spin-vibronic mechanism for ISC are presented, followed by empirical rules to estimate the rate of ISC within this regime.
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Deciphering the reaction dynamics underlying optimal control laser fields.

TL;DR: FemTosecond high-resolution pump-probe experiments have been used together with theoretical ab initio quantum calculations and wave packet dynamics simulations to decode an optimal femtosecond pulse that is generated from adaptive learning algorithms.
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Photochemistry and photophysics of transition metal complexes: Quantum chemistry

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight the role of spin-orbit coupling and environment effects in the photochemistry and photophysics of transition metal complexes and point to the limits of the methods for specific problems, such as accuracy, long-range charge-transfer excited states and biological environment modeling.
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Nonlinear optical properties of organic solids: ab initio polarizability and hyperpolarizabilities of nitroaniline derivatives

TL;DR: In this article, the static dipole polarizability, first and second hyperpolarizability tensors of molecules with nonlinear optical characteristics are calculated via ab initio coupled-perturbed Hartree-Fock theory.
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Quantitative wave function analysis for excited states of transition metal complexes

TL;DR: In this paper, the concept of charge transfer numbers is introduced and applied to characterize the excited states of transition metal complexes, including metal-centered, intra-ligand charge transfer, ligand-to-metal charge transfer.