Chemical reaction rates from ring polymer molecular dynamics

We show how the ring-polymer molecular dynamics method can be adapted to calculate approximate Kubo-transformed flux-side correlation functions, and hence rate coefficients for condensed phase reactions. An application of the method to the standard model for a chemical reaction in solution--a quarti...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of chemical physics 2005-02, Vol.122 (8), p.84106-84106
Hauptverfasser: Craig, Ian R, Manolopoulos, David E
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We show how the ring-polymer molecular dynamics method can be adapted to calculate approximate Kubo-transformed flux-side correlation functions, and hence rate coefficients for condensed phase reactions. An application of the method to the standard model for a chemical reaction in solution--a quartic double-well potential linearly coupled to a bath of harmonic oscillators--is found to give results of comparable accuracy to those of the classical Wigner model and the centroid molecular dynamics method. However, since the present method does not require that one evaluate the Wigner transform of a thermal flux operator or that one perform a separate path integral calculation for each molecular dynamics time step, we believe it will prove easier to apply to more general problems than either of these alternative techniques. We also present a (logarithmic) discretization scheme for the Ohmic bath in the system-bath model that gives converged results with just nine bath modes--a surprisingly small number for a model of a condensed phase reaction. Finally, we present some calculations of the transmission through an Eckart barrier which show that the present method provides a satisfactory (although not perfect) description of the deep quantum tunneling regime. Part of the reason for the success of the method is that it gives the exact quantum-mechanical rate constant for the transmission through a parabolic barrier, as we demonstrate analytically in the Appendix.
ISSN:0021-9606
1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/1.1850093