Recent experiments on laser-dissociation of aligned homonuclear diatomic molecules show an asymmetric forward-backward (spatial) electron-localization along the laser polarization axis. Most theoretical models attribute this asymmetry to interference effects between gerade and ungerade vibronic states. Presumably due to alignment, these models neglect molecular rotations and hence infer an asymmetric (post-dissociation) charge distribution over the two identical nuclei. In this paper, we question the equivalence that is made between spatial electron-localization, observed in experiments, and atomic electron-localization, alluded by these theoretical models. We show that (seeming) agreement between these models and experiments is due to an unfortunate omission of nuclear permutation symmetry, i.e., quantum statistics. Enforcement of the latter requires mandatory inclusion of the molecular rotational degree of freedom, even for perfectly aligned molecules. Unlike previous interpretations, we ascribe spatial electron-localization to the laser creation of a rovibronic wavepacket that involves field-free molecular eigenstates with opposite space-inversion symmetry i.e., even and odd parity. Space-inversion symmetry breaking would then lead to an asymmetric distribution of the (space-fixed) electronic density over the forward and backward hemisphere. However, owing to the simultaneous coexistence of two indistinguishable molecular orientational isomers, our analytical and computational results show that the post-dissociation electronic density along a specified space-fixed axis is equally shared between the two identical nuclei-a result that is in perfect accordance with the principle of the indistinguishability of identical particles.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0049710 | DOI Listing |
Inorg Chem
December 2024
State Key Laboratory of Featured Metal Materials and Life-cycle Safety for Composite Structures, School of Physical Science and Technology, Guangxi University, Nanning 530004, China.
Metal halide luminescent materials, particularly those doped with ns ions, exhibit exceptional optical properties. However, the luminescent mechanisms associated with the stereochemical activity of lone-pair electrons remain insufficiently explored. In this study, zero-dimensional (0D) tin-based halide (CHN)SnCl is utilized as a model system to investigate the effects of lattice distortion and lone-pair electron expression on fluorescence emission characteristics by doping with 6s and 5s ions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Theory Comput
November 2024
Departamento de Física y Química Teórica, Facultad de Química, UNAM, Mexico City 04510, Mexico.
A gradual but steady tide in theoretical chemistry is favoring the exploration of atomic and molecular interactions through the dynamical forces perceived and exerted by the particles of a system. By integrating the quantum mechanical force operator over all the spin and all but one of the spatial coordinates of the electrons, the Ehrenfest force density field reveals these forces directly and is separable into a classical term, related to the electric field, and a quantum mechanical correction, which we introduce and analyze for various atoms and molecules in this work. This exchange-correlation Ehrenfest force density field, (), excludes the dominant nuclear components that shape the full Ehrenfest field, revealing information about electron sharing, pairing, and delocalization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
July 2024
State Key Laboratory of High-performance Precision Manufacturing, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, 116024, China.
Glass ceramic (GC) is the most promising material for objective lenses for extreme ultraviolet lithography that must meet the subnanometer precision, which is characterized by low values of high spatial frequency surface roughness (HSFR). However, the HSFR of GC is typically degraded during ion beam figuring (IBF). Herein, a developed method for constructing molecular dynamics (MD) models of GC was presented, and the formation mechanisms of surface morphologies were investigated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMater Horiz
July 2024
Department of Chemistry, and Biochemistry, North Dakota State University, ND 58105, USA.
Electrides are a class of materials consisting of non-nuclear excess electrons as quasi-F centers or Farbe centers within a positively charged lattice framework, and have significant applications in the fields of electrochemistry, spintronics, and electrode materials. Using first-principles quantum mechanical calculations, we have demonstrated exotic electronic structures of zirconium-rich electrides, ZrX (X = O, Se, and Te), and obtained the quantitative values of charge transfer (oxidation states), and projected density of states associated with the localized quasi F-centers. The localized interstitial anionic electrons exhibit significant charge transfer values of approximately -1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
April 2024
Departamento de Química Física y Analítica, Universidad de Oviedo, 33006 Oviedo, Spain.
Despite the importance of the one-particle picture provided by the orbital paradigm, a rigorous understanding of the spatial distribution of electrons in molecules is still of paramount importance to chemistry. Considerable progress has been made following the introduction of topological approaches, capable of partitioning space into chemically meaningful regions. They usually provide atomic partitions, for example, through the attraction basins of the electron density in the quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM) or electron-pair decompositions, as in the case of the electron localization function (ELF).
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