Sodium hydride (NaH) in the gas phase presents a seemingly simple electronic structure making it a potentially tractable system for the detailed investigation of nonadiabatic molecular dynamics from both computational and experimental standpoints. The single vibrational degree of freedom, as well as the strong nonadiabatic coupling that arises from the excited electronic states taking on considerable ionic character, provides a realistic chemical system to test the accuracy of quasi-classical methods to model population dynamics where the results are directly comparable against quantum mechanical benchmarks. Using a simulated pump-probe type experiment, this work presents computational predictions of population transfer through the avoided ...
After photoexcitation, molecules can follow many different paths for electronic relaxation. Of these...
Zhao B, Han S, Malbon CL, Manthe U, Yarkony DR, Guo H. Full-dimensional quantum stereodynamics of th...
After photoexcitation, molecules can follow many different paths for electronic relaxation. Of these...
Sodium hydride (NaH) in the gas phase presents a seemingly simple electronic structure making it a p...
Vibrational wave packet dynamics provides an opportunity to explore the energy landscape and the pop...
In this work we study intramolecular vibronic relaxation effects and photoisomerization dynamics in ...
The question of how to describe the crossing of molecular electronic states is one of the most chall...
A method for computing coupled, diabatic state representations of the lowest electronic states coupl...
Light-driven reactions constitute an important class of processes in physics, chemistry, and biology...
Photoinduced processes play a crucial role in a multitude of important molecular phenomena. Accurate...
In continuation of our earlier effort to understand the nonadiabatic coupling effects in the prototy...
An extended hydrodynamic formulation is developed to describe non-adiabatic solvation dynamics for c...
The non-adiabatic quantum molecular dynamics (NA-QMD) method couples self-consistently classical nuc...
The non-adiabatic quantum molecular dynamics (NA-QMD) method couples self-consistently classical nuc...
WOS:000441475900004International audienceNonadiabatic mixed quantum-classical (NA-MQC) dynam...
After photoexcitation, molecules can follow many different paths for electronic relaxation. Of these...
Zhao B, Han S, Malbon CL, Manthe U, Yarkony DR, Guo H. Full-dimensional quantum stereodynamics of th...
After photoexcitation, molecules can follow many different paths for electronic relaxation. Of these...
Sodium hydride (NaH) in the gas phase presents a seemingly simple electronic structure making it a p...
Vibrational wave packet dynamics provides an opportunity to explore the energy landscape and the pop...
In this work we study intramolecular vibronic relaxation effects and photoisomerization dynamics in ...
The question of how to describe the crossing of molecular electronic states is one of the most chall...
A method for computing coupled, diabatic state representations of the lowest electronic states coupl...
Light-driven reactions constitute an important class of processes in physics, chemistry, and biology...
Photoinduced processes play a crucial role in a multitude of important molecular phenomena. Accurate...
In continuation of our earlier effort to understand the nonadiabatic coupling effects in the prototy...
An extended hydrodynamic formulation is developed to describe non-adiabatic solvation dynamics for c...
The non-adiabatic quantum molecular dynamics (NA-QMD) method couples self-consistently classical nuc...
The non-adiabatic quantum molecular dynamics (NA-QMD) method couples self-consistently classical nuc...
WOS:000441475900004International audienceNonadiabatic mixed quantum-classical (NA-MQC) dynam...
After photoexcitation, molecules can follow many different paths for electronic relaxation. Of these...
Zhao B, Han S, Malbon CL, Manthe U, Yarkony DR, Guo H. Full-dimensional quantum stereodynamics of th...
After photoexcitation, molecules can follow many different paths for electronic relaxation. Of these...