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Author
Date
2020-10-26Type
- Doctoral Thesis
ETH Bibliography
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Abstract
In this thesis, we propose path integral approaches to include nuclear quantum effects
such as tunneling, delocalization and zero point energy in a chemical simulation. Our
methods exhibit a strong connection to semiclassical instanton (SCI) theory, which
has been rigorously derived from first principles. SCI theory relies on computing the
quantum mechanical rate constant by making a steepest-descent approximation for
the quantum Boltzmann operator. However, our methods go beyond the semiclassical
approximation, and evaluate this operator exactly by sampling over instanton-like
paths and other paths in its vicinity. This allows us to treat systems with strong
anharmonicity where zero-frequency modes cause higher-order quantum fluctuations
to dominate the reaction rates.
We present a set of methods to treat reactions characterized by asymmetric barriers
at high and low temperatures for a challenging set of system parameters. Two of the
methods are inspired by quantum transition-state theories, and include constraint
functions in their formulations to enforce sampling of dominant tunneling paths. The
final approach relies on evaluating the rate constant by the method of saddle-point
approximation along the time variable. All these methods can be evaluated using
path integral Monte Carlo or molecular dynamics techniques, and applied to compute
the reaction rates in complex systems.
Our approach to treat chemical reactions in the nonadiabatic limit has the correct
classical limit, and is exact for a system of many crossed linear potentials. The
method is tested on a wide variety of model systems, and predicts excellent rates
even deep in the tunneling regime. A particularly appealing feature of this approach
is that it is able to accurately describe the inverted regime of the spin-boson model
without resorting to numerical extrapolation techniques. The method has also been
applied by coworkers to study electron-transfer reactions in the aqueous ferrous-ferric
system, where its spin-boson nature was confirmed in the classical limit. Likewise,
our methods developed to treat reactions in the Born-Oppenheimer regime show a
similar level of accuracy in predicting rates where nuclear quantum effects are seen to
play a significant role. We show that, for example, our quantum instanton approach
outperforms SCI theory in computing accurate rates for an asymmetric Eckart barrier.
In presenting the theory and results for these methods, we also demonstrate that some
of the other well-established methods that rely on the saddle-point approximation to
evaluate the time correlation function break down in certain important regimes of
chemical reactions. The deficiencies in these methods are explained and contrasted
against our approaches. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000460900Publication status
publishedExternal links
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Publisher
ETH ZurichOrganisational unit
09602 - Richardson, Jeremy / Richardson, Jeremy
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ETH Bibliography
yes
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