4.7 Article

Extended Mulliken-Hush Method with Applications to the Theoretical Study of Electron Transfer

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 17, Issue 11, Pages 6861-6875

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.1c00603

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [21733008, 21973077]

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The XMH method, a novel adiabatic-to-diabatic transformation strategy, provides a flexible and practical way to construct diabatic states by considering the magnitude and direction of the diabatic transition dipole. It shows better performance in predicting electronic couplings compared to the GMH method and maintains simplicity while giving reasonable results in electron transfer studies. The XMH method has the potential to be a general computational model for studying electron transfer reactions when combined with high-level electronic structure methods.
A novel adiabatic-to-diabatic (ATD) transformation strategy, namely, the extended Mulliken-Hush (XMH) method, is proposed to evaluate diabatic properties including electronic couplings, potential energy surfaces, and their crossings. The XMH method is developed by adopting our recently proposed ATD transformation formula of a general vectorial physical observable, in which a useful ATD transformation is further determined by using an auxiliary dipole between localized frontier orbitals as a simple approximation of the diabatic transition dipole. The XMH method is simple and practical that provides a flexible way to construct diabatic states. To some extent, it can be regarded as an extension of the generalized Mulliken-Hush (GMH) method since the latter takes a stronger approximation, in which the diabatic transition dipole is assumed to be vanishing. Test calculations on the HeH2+ system show that the electronic couplings predicted by the XMH method are closer to the ones calculated by the valence bond block-diagonalization approach than the GMH ones since the XMH method takes into account both the magnitude and direction of the diabatic transition dipole, which is consistent with the properties of this molecule. In the study of electron transfer in the two kinds of donor-bridge-acceptor systems, the XMH method maintains the simplicity of the GMH method and gives reasonable results even when the latter fails, wherein the diabatic transition dipole is nearly perpendicular to the difference of the initial and final adiabatic dipoles. More importantly, the XMH method can be easily combined with high-level electronic structure methods, in which the properties of the ground and excited states may be more accurately calculated, and hence, one may expect that further development of the XMH method would result in a general computational model for studying electron transfer reactions.

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