On the "Matsubara heating" of overtone intensities and Fermi splittings

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS(2021)

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摘要
Classical molecular dynamics (MD) and imaginary-time path-integral dynamics methods underestimate the infrared absorption intensities of overtone and combination bands by typically an order of magnitude. Ple et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 155, 104108 (2021)] have shown that this is because such methods fail to describe the coupling of the centroid to the Matsubara dynamics of the fluctuation modes; classical first-order perturbation theory (PT) applied to the Matsubara dynamics is sufficient to recover most of the lost intensity in simple models and gives identical results to quantum (Rayleigh-Schrodinger) PT. Here, we show numerically that the results of this analysis can be used as post-processing correction factors, which can be applied to realistic (classical MD or path-integral dynamics) simulations of infrared spectra. We find that the correction factors recover most of the lost intensity in the overtone and combination bands of gas-phase water and ammonia and much of it for liquid water. We then re-derive and confirm the earlier PT analysis by applying canonical PT to Matsubara dynamics, which has the advantage of avoiding secular terms and gives a simple picture of the perturbed Matsubara dynamics in terms of action-angle variables. Collectively, these variables "Matsubara heat" the amplitudes of the overtone and combination vibrations of the centroid to what they would be in a classical system with the oscillators (of frequency Omega(i)) held at their quantum effective temperatures [of h Omega(i) coth(beta h Omega(i)/2)/2k(B)]. Numerical calculations show that a similar neglect of "Matsubara heating" causes path-integral methods to underestimate Fermi resonance splittings. (C) 2021 Author(s).
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