A personal perspective of the present status and future challenges facing thermal reaction rate theory

Eli Pollak*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Reaction rate theory has been at the center of physical chemistry for well over one hundred years. The evolution of the theory is not only of historical interest. Reliable and accurate computation of reaction rates remains a challenge to this very day, especially in view of the development of quantum chemistry methods, which predict the relevant force fields. It is still not possible to compute the numerically exact rate on the fly when the system has more than at most a few dozen anharmonic degrees of freedom, so one must consider various approximate methods, not only from the practical point of view of constructing numerical algorithms but also on conceptual and formal levels. In this Perspective, I present some of the recent analytical results concerning leading order terms in an ℏ2m series expansion of the exact rate and their implications on various approximate theories. A second aspect has to do with the crossover temperature between tunneling and thermal activation. Using a uniform semiclassical transmission probability rather than the “primitive” semiclassical theory leads to the conclusion that there is no divergence problem associated with a “crossover temperature.” If one defines a semiclassical crossover temperature as the point at which the tunneling energy of the instanton equals the barrier height, then it is a factor of two higher than its previous estimate based on the “primitive” semiclassical approximation. In the low temperature tunneling regime, the uniform semiclassical theory as well as the “primitive” semiclassical theory were based on the classical Euclidean action of a periodic orbit on the inverted potential. The uniform semiclassical theory wrongly predicts that the “half-point,” which is the energy at which the transmission probability equals 1/2, for any barrier potential, is always the barrier energy. We describe here how augmenting the Euclidean action with constant terms of order ℏ2 can significantly improve the accuracy of the semiclassical theory and correct this deficiency. This also leads to a deep connection with and improvement of vibrational perturbation theory. The uniform semiclassical theory also enables an extension of the quantum version of Kramers’ turnover theory to temperatures below the “crossover temperature.” The implications of these recent advances on various approximate methods used to date are discussed at length, leading to the conclusion that reaction rate theory will continue to challenge us both on conceptual and practical levels for years to come.

Original languageEnglish
Article number150902
JournalJournal of Chemical Physics
Volume160
Issue number15
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21 Apr 2024

Bibliographical note

I thank Professor Michele Ceotto for his detailed comments on an earlier version of this perspective, which significantly improved it. I also thank Professor Jianshu Cao and Professor Jian Liu and my Ph.D. student Mr. Sameernandan Upadhyayula for useful discussions. This work was graciously supported by a grant from the Israel Science Foundation.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Author(s).

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • General Physics and Astronomy
  • Physical and Theoretical Chemistry

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A personal perspective of the present status and future challenges facing thermal reaction rate theory'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this