Confirming the role of nuclear tunneling in aqueous ferrous-ferric electron transfer
Autor: | Joseph E. Lawrence, David E. Manolopoulos |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Chemical Physics (physics.chem-ph)
Physics 010304 chemical physics Anharmonicity Degrees of freedom (statistics) FOS: Physical sciences General Physics and Astronomy Size consistency and size extensivity 010402 general chemistry 01 natural sciences 0104 chemical sciences Marcus theory Electron transfer Transition state theory Saddle point Physics - Chemical Physics 0103 physical sciences Statistical physics Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Quantum |
Zdroj: | The Journal of chemical physics. 153(15) |
ISSN: | 1089-7690 |
Popis: | We revisit the well-known aqueous ferrous-ferric electron transfer reaction in order to address recent suggestions that nuclear tunnelling can lead to significant deviation from the linear response assumption inherent in the Marcus picture of electron transfer. A recent study of this reaction by Richardson and coworkers has found a large difference between their new path-integral method, GR-QTST, and the saddle point approximation of Wolynes (Wolynes theory). They suggested that this difference could be attributed to the existence of multiple tunnelling pathways, leading Wolynes theory to significantly overestimate the rate. This was used to argue that the linear response assumptions of Marcus theory may break down for liquid systems when tunnelling is important. If true, this would imply that the commonly used method for studying such systems, where the problem is mapped onto a spin-boson model, is invalid. However, we have recently shown that size inconsistency in GR-QTST can lead to poor predictions of the rate in systems with many degrees of freedom. We have also suggested an improved method, the path-integral linear golden-rule (LGR) approximation, which fixes this problem. Here we demonstrate that the GR-QTST results for ferrous-ferric electron transfer are indeed dominated by its size consistency error. Furthermore, by comparing the LGR and Wolynes theory results, we confirm the established picture of nuclear tunnelling in this system. Finally, by comparing our path-integral results to those obtained by mapping onto the spin-boson model, we reassess the importance of anharmonic effects and the accuracy of this commonly used mapping approach. 15 pages, 5 figures |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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