4.5 Review

NAST: Nonadiabatic Statistical Theory Package for Predicting Kinetics of Spin-Dependent Processes

Journal

TOPICS IN CURRENT CHEMISTRY
Volume 380, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s41061-022-00366-w

Keywords

Intersystem crossings; Spin-forbidden reactions; Spin-orbit coupling; Reaction rates

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation through a CAREER Award [CHE 1654547]

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We present a nonadiabatic statistical theory (NAST) package for predicting kinetics of spin-dependent processes. The package can calculate the probabilities and rates of transitions between electronic states and account for quantum effects. It can be applied to large molecular systems and used to study slow nonadiabatic processes.
We present a nonadiabatic statistical theory (NAST) package for predicting kinetics of spin-dependent processes, such as intersystem crossings, spin-forbidden unimolecular reactions, and spin crossovers. The NAST package can calculate the probabilities and rates of transitions between the electronic states of different spin multiplicities. Both the microcanonical (energy-dependent) and canonical (temperature-dependent) rate constants can be obtained. Quantum effects, including tunneling, zero-point vibrational energy, and reaction path interference, can be accounted for. In the limit of an adiabatic unimolecular reaction proceeding on a single electronic state, NAST reduces to the traditional transition state theory. Because NAST requires molecular properties at only a few points on potential energy surfaces, it can be applied to large molecular systems, used with accurate high-level electronic structure methods, and employed to study slow nonadiabatic processes. The essential NAST input data include the nuclear Hessian at the reactant minimum, as well as the nuclear Hessians, energy gradients, and spin-orbit coupling at the minimum energy crossing point (MECP) between two states. The additional computational tools included in the NAST package can be used to extract the required input data from the output files of electronic structure packages, calculate the effective Hessian at the MECP, and fit the reaction coordinate for more advanced NAST calculations. We describe the theory, its implementation, and three examples of application to different molecular systems.

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