Professor of Theoretical Chemistry

What we do...

Our theoretical research group uses mathematical and computational techniques to investigate quantum behaviour in the motion of atomic nuclei. We carry out computer simulations which illustrate how quantum mechanics changes the motion of atoms and molecules in chemical reactions and inside liquid water and ice.

Research

Our research investigates how the quantum properties of atomic nuclei affect chemical reaction rates and mechanisms. We develop and apply a wide range of theories and computational techniques, from exact solutions of the Schrödinger equation for small systems, to approximate Feynman path- integral approaches for larger systems.

First-principles calculations of wave functions of chemical reactions

We were the first group to calculate a complete time-dependent wave function that visualizes the entire dynamics of a chemical reaction from approach of the reactants through to scattering of the products into space. This work is done in collaboration with a leading experimental group (R.N. Zare, Stanford) who measure detailed product-scattering patterns that our calculations reproduce and interpret in terms of first-principles quantum mechanics.

Instanton simulations of quantum tunnelling

Instantons arise when Feynman path-integral theory is used to describe quantum tunnelling through barriers; they describe the dominant tunnelling path, which gives an approximate but physically rigorous description of the tunnelling dynamics. We have recently developed and extended instanton theory such that the instantons are represented by a series of beads which can be rapidly strung together to describe quantum tunnelling in complex systems. We are currently applying this method to tunnelling in water clusters (in collaboration with Prof. D.J. Wales), and to proton transfer reactions in solution.

Winding effects at conical intersections

Conical intersections arise when potential energy surfaces intersect. We have found that the nuclear wave functions at such intersections can be unwound, such that contributions from Feynman paths that wind different numbers of times around the intersection can be rigorously separated. This gives rise to quantum interference effects; we are currently investigating how such effects influence the efficiency of relaxation through a conical intersection.

Publications

Derivation of a true (t → 0+) quantum transition-state theory. I. Uniqueness and equivalence to ring-polymer molecular dynamics transition-state-theory
TJH Hele, SC Althorpe
J Chem Phys
(2013)
138
Investigation of terahertz vibration-rotation tunneling spectra for the water octamer
JO Richardson, DJ Wales, SC Althorpe, RP McLaughlin, MR Viant, O Shih, RJ Saykally
The Journal of Physical Chemistry A
(2013)
117
Simultaneous Measurement of Reactive and Inelastic Scattering: Differential Cross Section of the H plus HD → HD(v′, j′) + H Reaction
J Jankunas, M Sneha, RN Zare, F Bouakline, SC Althorpe
Zeitschrift für Physikalische Chemie
(2013)
227
A state-to-state dynamical study of the Br + H 2 reaction: Comparison of quantum and classical trajectory results
AN Panda, D Herráez-Aguilar, PG Jambrina, J Aldegunde, SC Althorpe, FJ Aoiz
Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP
(2012)
14
Seemingly Anomalous Angular Distributions in H + D2 Reactive Scattering
J Jankunas, RN Zare, F Bouakline, SC Althorpe, D Herráez-Aguilar, FJ Aoiz
Science
(2012)
336
Improved free-energy interpolation scheme for obtaining gas-phase reaction rates from ring-polymer molecular dynamics
T Stecher, SC Althorpe
Molecular Physics
(2012)
110
Instanton calculations of tunneling splittings for water dimer and trimer.
JO Richardson, SC Althorpe, DJ Wales
The Journal of Chemical Physics
(2011)
135
On the equivalence of two commonly used forms of semiclassical instanton theory
SC Althorpe
Journal of Chemical Physics
(2011)
134
Symmetry Analysis of Geometric-Phase Effects in Quantum Dynamics
SC Althorpe
(2011)
17
Ring-polymer instanton method for calculating tunneling splittings
JO Richardson, SC Althorpe
The Journal of chemical physics
(2011)
134

Research Group

Research Interest Group

Telephone number

01223 336373

Email address