Login / Signup

Accurate calculation of tunneling splittings in water clusters using path-integral based methods.

Yu-Cheng ZhuShuo YangJia-Xi ZengWei FangLing JiangDonghui ZhangXin-Zheng Li
Published in: The Journal of chemical physics (2023)
Tunneling splittings observed in molecular rovibrational spectra are significant evidence for tunneling motion of hydrogen nuclei in water clusters. Accurate calculations of the splitting sizes from first principles require a combination of high-quality inter-atomic interactions and rigorous methods to treat the nuclei with quantum mechanics. Many theoretical efforts have been made in recent decades. This Perspective focuses on two path-integral based tunneling splitting methods whose computational cost scales well with the system size, namely, the ring-polymer instanton method and the path-integral molecular dynamics (PIMD) method. From a simple derivation, we show that the former is a semiclassical approximation to the latter, despite that the two methods are derived very differently. Currently, the PIMD method is considered to be an ideal route to rigorously compute the ground-state tunneling splitting, while the instanton method sacrifices some accuracy for a significantly smaller computational cost. An application scenario of such a quantitatively rigorous calculation is to test and calibrate the potential energy surfaces of molecular systems by spectroscopic accuracy. Recent progress in water clusters is reviewed, and the current challenges are discussed.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • density functional theory
  • high resolution
  • monte carlo
  • escherichia coli
  • molecular docking
  • climate change
  • quality improvement
  • quantum dots
  • single molecule
  • human health