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1.
J Chem Phys ; 150(1): 014103, 2019 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30621422

ABSTRACT

We perform an electronic and nuclear flux analysis for nonadiabatic dynamics and its corresponding adiabatic counterpart, both of the wavefunctions of which are represented in the Born-Huang expansion. It is well known that the electronic-nuclear configurations (terms) in the expansion of the total wavefunction interfere each other through the nonadiabatic interactions and give birth to electronic and nuclear fluxes. Interestingly, even in the adiabatic dynamics without such nonadiabatic interactions, a wavefunction composed of more than one adiabatic state can undergo interference among the components and give the electronic and nuclear fluxes. That is, the individual pieces of the wavepacket components associated with the electronic wavefunctions in the adiabatic representation can propagate in time independently with no nonadiabatic interaction, and yet they can interfere among themselves to generate the specific types of electronic and nuclear fluxes. We refer to the dynamics of this class of total wavefunction as multiple-configuration adiabatic Born-Huang dynamics. A systematic way to distinguish the electronic and nuclear fluxes arising from nonadiabatic and the corresponding adiabatic dynamics is discussed, which leads to the deeper insight about the nonadiabatic dynamics and quantum interference in molecular processes. The so-called adiabatic flux will also be discussed.

2.
J Comput Chem ; 40(1): 148-163, 2019 Jan 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30520116

ABSTRACT

A detailed flux analysis on nonadiabatically coupled electronic and nuclear dynamics in the intramolecular electron transfer of LiF is presented. Full quantum dynamics both of electrons and nuclei within two-state model has uncovered interesting features of the individual fluxes (current of probability density) and correlation between them. In particular, a spatiotemporal oscillatory pattern of electronic flux has been revealed, which reflects the coherence coming from spatiotemporal differential overlap between nuclear wavepackets running on covalent and ionic potential curves. In this regard, a theoretical analogy between the nonadiabatic transitions and the Rabi oscillation is surveyed. We also present a flux-flux correlation between the nuclear and electronic motions, which quantifies the extent of deviation of the actual electronic and nuclear coupled dynamics from the Born-Oppenheimer adiabatic limit, which is composed only of a single product of the adiabatic electronic and nuclear wavefunctions. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

3.
J Comput Chem ; 38(23): 2030-2040, 2017 09 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28618021

ABSTRACT

Accurate theoretical calculation of photoelectron angular distributions for general molecules is becoming an important tool to image various chemical reactions in real time. We show in this article that not only photoionization total cross sections but also photoelectron angular distributions can be accurately calculated using complex Gauss-type orbital (cGTO) basis functions. Our method can be easily combined with existing quantum chemistry techniques including electron correlation effects, and applied to various molecules. The so-called two-potential formula is applied to represent the transition dipole moment from an initial bound state to a final continuum state in the molecular coordinate frame. The two required continuum functions, the zeroth-order final continuum state and the first-order wave function induced by the photon field, have been variationally obtained using the complex basis function method with a mixture of appropriate cGTOs and conventional real Gauss-type orbitals (GTOs) to represent the continuum orbitals as well as the remaining bound orbitals. The complex orbital exponents of the cGTOs are optimized by fitting to the outgoing Coulomb functions. The efficiency of the current method is demonstrated through the calculations of the asymmetry parameters and molecular-frame photoelectron angular distributions of H2+ and H2 . In the calculations of H2 , the static exchange and random phase approximations are employed, and the dependence of the results on the basis functions is discussed. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

4.
J Comput Chem ; 38(12): 910-925, 2017 05 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28247916

ABSTRACT

The complex basis function (CBF) method applied to various atomic and molecular photoionization problems can be interpreted as an L2 method to solve the driven-type (inhomogeneous) Schrödinger equation, whose driven term being dipole operator times the initial state wave function. However, efficient basis functions for representing the solution have not fully been studied. Moreover, the relation between their solution and that of the ordinary Schrödinger equation has been unclear. For these reasons, most previous applications have been limited to total cross sections. To examine the applicability of the CBF method to differential cross sections and asymmetry parameters, we show that the complex valued solution to the driven-type Schrödinger equation can be variationally obtained by optimizing the complex trial functions for the frequency dependent polarizability. In the test calculations made for the hydrogen photoionization problem with five or six complex Slater-type orbitals (cSTOs), their complex valued expansion coefficients and the orbital exponents have been optimized with the analytic derivative method. Both the real and imaginary parts of the solution have been obtained accurately in a wide region covering typical molecular regions. Their phase shifts and asymmetry parameters are successfully obtained by extrapolating the CBF solution from the inner matching region to the asymptotic region using WKB method. The distribution of the optimized orbital exponents in the complex plane is explained based on the close connection between the CBF method and the driven-type equation method. The obtained information is essential to constructing the appropriate basis sets in future molecular applications. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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