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Journal ArticleDOI

Nonadiabatic time-dependent wave packet study of the D+ + H2 reaction system.

Tian-Shu Chu, +1 more
- 17 Mar 2005 - 
- Vol. 109, Iss: 10, pp 2050-2056
TLDR
These quantum theoretical cross sections derived from the ground rovibrational state of H(2) show wiggling structures and an increasing trend for both the reactive charge transfer and the nonreactive charge transfer but a decreasing trend for the reactive noncharge transfer throughout the investigated collision energy range 1.7-2.5 eV.
Abstract
A theoretical investigation on the nonadiabatic processes of the D(+) + H(2) reaction system has been carried out by means of exact three-dimensional nonadiabatic time-dependent wave packet calculations with an extended split operator scheme (XSOS). The diabatic potential energy surface newly constructed by Kamisaka et al. (J. Chem. Phys. 2002, 116, 654) was employed in the calculations. This study provided quantum cross sections for three competing channels of the reactive charge transfer, the nonreactive charge transfer, and the reactive noncharge transfer, which contrasted markedly to many previous quantum theoretical reports on the (DH(2))(+) system restricted to the total angular momentum J = 0. These quantum theoretical cross sections derived from the ground rovibrational state of H(2) show wiggling structures and an increasing trend for both the reactive charge transfer and the nonreactive charge transfer but a decreasing trend for the reactive noncharge transfer throughout the investigated collision energy range 1.7-2.5 eV. The results also show that the channel of the reactive noncharge transfer with the largest cross section is the dominant one. A further investigation of the v-dependent behavior of the probabilities for the three channels revealed an interesting dominant trend for the reactive charge transfer and the nonreactive charge transfer at vibrational excitation v = 4 of H(2). In addition, the comparison between the centrifugal sudden (CS) and exact calculations showed the importance of the Coriolis coupling for the reactive system. The computed quantum cross sections are also compared with the experimental measurement results.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The time-dependent quantum wave packet approach to the electronically nonadiabatic processes in chemical reactions

TL;DR: The time-dependent quantum wave packet approach has been improved and formulated to treat the multiple surface problems and thus provided a new simple, yet a clear quantum picture for interpreting the reaction mechanism underlying the nonadiabatic dynamical processes as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Coriolis coupling in chemical reaction dynamics

TL;DR: The results of the own calculations by the time-dependent quantum wave packet approach for H + D2 and F(2P3/2,2P1/2) + H2 as well as for the ion-molecule collisions of He+ H2 +, D(-) +H2, H(-) - D2, and D+ + H 2 are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantum dynamics of complex-forming bimolecular reactions

TL;DR: The reaction path for a complex-forming reaction is often barrierless, which results in weak and sometimes negative temperature dependence for its rate constant, and the product angular and internal distributions of such reactions also bear clear signatures as mentioned in this paper.
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Intermolecular hydrogen-bonding effects on photophysics and photochemistry

TL;DR: In this article, a dynamic equilibrium induced by the intermolecular hydrogen bond strengthening in the electronically excited state of fluorenone chromophore was used for nonadiabatic photophysical processes and photochemical reactions.
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Differential cross sections and product rotational polarization in A + BC reactions using wave packet methods: H+ + D2 and Li + HF examples.

TL;DR: Differential cross sections for individual final rotational states of the products are obtained based on exact dynamical calculations for some selected total angular momenta, combined with the random phase approximation to save the high computational time required to calculate all partial waves with very long propagations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An investigation of the F+H2 reaction based on a full ab initio description of the open-shell character of the F(2P) atom

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a full framework for the quantum treatment of reactions of the fluorine atom with molecular hydrogen, which involves four potential energy surfaces (PESs) and two coordinate-dependent spin-orbit interaction terms.
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