From free-energy profiles to activation free energies

Given a chemical reaction going from reactant (R) to the product (P) on a potential energy surface (PES) and a collective variable (CV) discriminating between R and P, we define the free-energy profile (FEP) as the logarithm of the marginal Boltzmann distribution of the CV. This FEP is not a true fr...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of chemical physics 2022-08, Vol.157 (8), p.084113-084113
Hauptverfasser: Dietschreit, Johannes C. B., Diestler, Dennis J., Hulm, Andreas, Ochsenfeld, Christian, Gómez-Bombarelli, Rafael
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Given a chemical reaction going from reactant (R) to the product (P) on a potential energy surface (PES) and a collective variable (CV) discriminating between R and P, we define the free-energy profile (FEP) as the logarithm of the marginal Boltzmann distribution of the CV. This FEP is not a true free energy. Nevertheless, it is common to treat the FEP as the “free-energy” analog of the minimum potential energy path and to take the activation free energy, ΔFRP‡, as the difference between the maximum at the transition state and the minimum at R. We show that this approximation can result in large errors. The FEP depends on the CV and is, therefore, not unique. For the same reaction, different discriminating CVs can yield different ΔFRP‡. We derive an exact expression for the activation free energy that avoids this ambiguity. We find ΔFRP‡ to be a combination of the probability of the system being in the reactant state, the probability density on the dividing surface, and the thermal de Broglie wavelength associated with the transition. We apply our formalism to simple analytic models and realistic chemical systems and show that the FEP-based approximation applies only at low temperatures for CVs with a small effective mass. Most chemical reactions occur on complex, high-dimensional PES that cannot be treated analytically and pose the added challenge of choosing a good CV. We study the influence of that choice and find that, while the reaction free energy is largely unaffected, ΔFRP‡ is quite sensitive.
ISSN:0021-9606
1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/5.0102075