info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Photoinduced Dynamics with Constrained Vibrational Motion: FrozeNM Algorithm
Fecha
2020-12-08Registro en:
Negrín Yuvero, Lázaro Hassiel; Freixas Lemus, Victor Manuel; Rodríguez Hernández, Beatriz; Rojas Lorenzo, G.; Tretiak, Sergei; et al.; Photoinduced Dynamics with Constrained Vibrational Motion: FrozeNM Algorithm; American Chemical Society; Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation; 16; 12; 8-12-2020; 7289-7298
1549-9618
1549-9626
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Negrín Yuvero, Lázaro Hassiel
Freixas Lemus, Victor Manuel
Rodríguez Hernández, Beatriz
Rojas Lorenzo, G.
Tretiak, Sergei
Bastida, A.
Fernández Alberti, Sebastián
Resumen
Ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulation, analyzed in terms of vibrational normal modes, is a widely used technique that facilitates understanding of complex structural motions and coupling between electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom. Usually, only a subset of vibrations is directly involved in the process of interest. The impact of these vibrations can be evaluated by performing AIMD simulations by selectively freezing certain motions. Herein, we present frozen normal mode (FrozeNM), a new algorithm to apply normal-mode constraints in AIMD simulations, as implemented in the nonadiabatic excited state molecular dynamics code. We further illustrate its capacity by analyzing the impact of normal-mode constraints on the photoinduced energy transfer between polyphenylene ethynylene dendrimer building blocks. Our results show that the electronic relaxation can be significantly slowed down by freezing a well-selected small subset of active normal modes characterized by their contributions in the direction of energy transfer. The application of these constraints reduces the nonadiabatic coupling between electronic excited states during the entire dynamical simulations. Furthermore, we validate reduced dimensionality models by freezing all the vibrations, except a few active modes. Altogether, we consider FrozeNM as a useful tool that can be broadly used to underpin the role of vibrational motion in a studied process and to formulate reduced models that describe essential physical phenomena.