Zero-point energy, tunnelling, and vibrational adiabaticity in the Mu + H<sub>2</sub>reaction
Article 2014 en
Authors
SM
Steven L. Mielke
BG
Bruce C. Garrett
DF
Donald G. Fleming
Abstract
1 min read
Isotopic substitution of muonium for hydrogen provides an unparalleled opportunity to deepen our understanding of quantum mass effects on chemical reactions. A recent topical review in this journal of the thermal and vibrationally state-selected reaction of Mu with H2 raises a number of issues that are addressed here. We show that some earlier quantum mechanical calculations of the Mu + H2 reaction, which are highlighted in this review, and which have been used to benchmark approximate methods, are in error by as much as 19% in the low-temperature limit. We demonstrate that an approximate treatment of the Born–Oppenheimer diagonal correction that was used in some recent studies is not valid for treating the vibrationally state-selected reaction. We also discuss why vibrationally adiabatic potentials that neglect bend zero-point energy are not a useful analytical tool for understanding reaction rates, and why vibrationally non-adiabatic transitions cannot be understood by considering tunnelling through vibrationally adiabatic potentials. Finally, we present calculations on a hierarchical family of potential energy surfaces to assess the sensitivity of rate constants to the quality of the potential surface.
Pavel Bakule, Donald G. Fleming, Oleksandr Sukhorukov, Katsuhiko Ishida, F. L. Pratt, Takamasa Momose, E. Torikai, Steven L. Mielke, Bruce C. Garrett, Kirk A. Peterson, George C. Schatz, Donald G Truhlar
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