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Journal ArticleDOI

The stable states picture of chemical reactions. II. Rate constants for condensed and gas phase reaction models

Richard F. Grote, +1 more
- 15 Sep 1980 - 
- Vol. 73, Iss: 6, pp 2715-2732
TLDR
In this paper, the stable states picture (SSP) was used to derive the time correlation function (tcf) for the rate constant κ for a wide variety of gas and solution phase reaction models.
Abstract
The time correlation function (tcf) formulas for rate constants κ derived via the stable states picture (SSP) of chemical reactions are applied to a wide variety (a–d) of gas and solution phase reactionmodels. (a) For gas phase bimolecular reactions, we show that the flux tcf governing κ corresponds to standard numerical trajectory calculation methods. Alternate formulas for κ are derived which focus on saddle point surfaces, thus increasing computational efficiency. Advantages of the SSP formulas for κ are discussed. (b) For gas phase unimolecular reactions, simple results for κ are found in both the strong and weak coupling collision limits; the often ignored role of product stabilization is exposed for reversible isomerizations. The SSP results correct some standard weak coupling rate constant results by as much as 50%. (c) For barrier crossing reactions in solution, we evaluate κ for a generalized (non‐Markovian) Langevin description of the dynamics. For several realistic models of time dependent friction, κ differs dramatically from the popular Kramers constant friction predictions; this has important implications for the validity of transition state theory. (d) For solutionreactions heavily influenced by spatial diffusion, we show that the SSP isolates short range reaction dynamics of interest and includes important barrier region effects in structural isomerizations often missed in standard descriptions.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

NaCl Dissociation Dynamics at the Air−Water Interface

TL;DR: The rate for NaCl dissociation was compared between the air−water interface and water bulk using the transition path sampling formulism to begin understanding how an interface affects reaction dyna... as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Simulation of a relativistic soliton model of crystalline polymer dynamics

TL;DR: In this article, the sine-Gordon soliton model of dielectric α relaxation in crystalline polymers is studied and the intermediate range of the coupling constant, which is essentially the ratio of intramolecular to intermolecular interaction strengths, via another stochastic molecular dynamics computer simulation is examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kinetics of Proton Discharge on Metal Electrodes: Effects of Vibrational Nonadiabaticity and Solvent Dynamics.

TL;DR: A unified formulation is devised to describe such PCET reactions in terms of a curve crossing between two diabatic vibronic states, employing an interpolation scheme that spans the adiabatic transition state theory, nonadiabatic Fermi golden rule, and solvent-controlled regimes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic reaction coordinate in thermally fluctuating environment in the framework of the multidimensional generalized Langevin equations

TL;DR: The theory extracts a reaction coordinate whose sign determines the fate of the reaction taking into account thermally fluctuating environments, memory effect, and nonlinearities and finds that the location of the boundary of reactivity is satisfactorily reproduced as the zero of the statistical average of the new reaction coordinate.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Brownian motion in a field of force and the diffusion model of chemical reactions

TL;DR: In this article, a particle which is caught in a potential hole and which, through the shuttling action of Brownian motion, can escape over a potential barrier yields a suitable model for elucidating the applicability of the transition state method for calculating the rate of chemical reactions.
Book

Theory of Unimolecular Reactions

W. Forst, +1 more
BookDOI

Dynamics of Molecular Collisions

TL;DR: In this paper, the potential energy surfaces and their effect on collision processes are discussed. But the authors focus on the nonadiabatic processes in collision theory and not on the classical trajectories of trajectories.
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