4.8 Article

Nonadiabatic Nuclear-Electron Dynamics: A Quantum Computing Approach

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS
Volume 14, Issue 31, Pages 7065-7072

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpclett.3c01589

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This article discusses the application of coupled quantum electron-nuclear dynamics in the Born-Huang expansion of the molecular wave function and the perturbation of nonadiabatic effects. Meanwhile, a quantum algorithm for simulating the time evolution of molecular systems is proposed and applied to the proton transfer dynamics in malonaldehyde. The proposed algorithm can be easily extended to include the dynamics of the classically described molecular scaffold. If the electrons do not adiabatically follow the nuclear displacement, the entanglement between electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom can persist for a long time. When powerful quantum computers become available, the proposed algorithm may become a valid candidate for studying such phenomena.
Coupled quantum electron-nuclear dynamics is oftenassociatedwith the Born-Huang expansion of the molecular wave functionand the appearance of nonadiabatic effects as a perturbation. On theother hand, native multicomponent representations of electrons andnuclei also exist, which do not rely on any a priori approximation.However, their implementation is hampered by prohibitive scaling.Consequently, quantum computers offer a unique opportunity for extendingtheir use to larger systems. Here, we propose a quantum algorithmfor simulating the time-evolution of molecular systems and apply itto proton transfer dynamics in malonaldehyde, described as a rigidscaffold. The proposed quantum algorithm can be easily generalizedto include the explicit dynamics of the classically described molecularscaffold. We show how entanglement between electronic and nucleardegrees of freedom can persist over long times if electrons do notfollow the nuclear displacement adiabatically. The proposed quantumalgorithm may become a valid candidate for the study of such phenomenawhen sufficiently powerful quantum computers become available.

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