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Hamiltonian anharmonic

Wolf R J and Hase W L 1980 Quasiperiodic trajectories for a multidimensional anharmonic classical Hamiltonian excited above the unimolecular threshold J. Chem. Phys. 73 3779-90... [Pg.1041]

Note that anharmonic Hamiltonians similar to (13) have been extensively studied [59,60]. [Pg.251]

Now, recall that for weak hydrogen bonds the high-frequency mode is much faster than the slow mode because 0 m 20 00. As a consequence, the quantum adiabatic approximation may be assumed to be verified when the anharmonic coupling parameter aG is not too strong. Thus, neglecting the diabatic part of the Hamiltonian (22) and using Eqs. (18) to (20), one obtains... [Pg.252]

Several studies of Fermi resonances in the absence of H bond have been made [76-80]. We shall account for this situation by simply ignoring the anharmonic coupling between the fast and slow modes (a = 0). The theory then describes the coupling between the fast mode and a bending mode through the potential Htf, with both of these modes being damped in the same way. Because aG = 0, the slow mode does not play any role, so that the total Hamiltonian does not refer to it ... [Pg.275]

In the Heitler-London approximation, with allowance made only for biquadratic anharmonic coupling between collectivized high-frequency and low-frequency modes of a lattice of adsorbed molecules (admolecular lattice), the total Hamiltonian (4.3.1) can be written as a sum of harmonic and anharmonic contributions ... [Pg.175]

For these vibrations, the quantization scheme of Section 4.2 can be carried over without any modification (Iachello and Oss, 1991a). The potentials in each stretching coordinate 5 are in an anharmonic force field approximation represented by Morse potentials. The boson operators (Ot,xt) correspond to the quantization of anharmonic Morse oscillators, with classical Hamiltonian... [Pg.135]

The second set of problems in dynamics are those of scattering theory where the Hamiltonian is of the form H = H0 + V and the interaction V vanishes when the colliding particles are far apart. It is usually assumed that the H0 part is already solved and that the interesting or the hard part is to account for the role of V. For realistic systems, which are anharmonic, even the role of H() can be quite significant. An example that has received much recent attention is the reaction of vibrationally excited HOD with H atoms (Sinha et al., 1991 Figure 8.2). The large difference in the OH and OD vibrational frequencies means that the stretch overtones of HOD are primarily local in character (cf. Section 4.21). It follows that one can excite HOD to overtones localized preferentially on either one of the two bonds and that an approaching H atom will abstract prefer-... [Pg.192]

The model fundamental to all analyses of vibrational motion requires that the atoms in the system oscillate with small amplitude about some defined set of equilibrium positions. The Hamiltonian describing this motion is customarily taken to be quadratic in the atomic displacements, hence in principle a set of normal modes can be found in terms of these normal modes both the kinetic energy and the potential energy of the system are diagonal. The interaction of the system with electromagnetic radiation, i.e. excitation of specific normal modes of vibration, is then governed by selection rules which depend on features of the microscopic symmetry. It is well known that this model can be worked out in detail for small molecules and for crystalline solids. In some very favorable simple cases the effects of anharmonicity can be accounted for, provided they are not too large. [Pg.137]

When the anharmonic terms are included in the full Hamiltonian, the resulting eigenstates, being mixtures of the ZO states, carry some brightness indicated by... [Pg.27]

In the LM model, molecular vibrations are treated as motions of individual anharmonic bonds [38] (usually Morse oscillators). They therefore include anharmonicity, but not coupling between bonds, thus requiring inclusion of interbond coupling for obtaining a better description. For the case of t identical Morse oscillators, the energy levels related to the LM Hamiltonian are given by... [Pg.29]

What is a polyad A polyad is a subset of the zero-order states within a specifiable region of Evib (typically a few hundred reciprocal centimeters) that are strongly coupled by anharmonic resonances to each other and negligibly coupled to all other nearby zero-order states. If approximate constants of motion of the exact vibration-rotation Hamiltonian exist, then the exact H can be (approximately) block diagonalized. Each subblock of H corresponds to one polyad and is labeled by a set of polyad quantum numbers. For the C2H2S0 state, a procedure proposed by Kellman [9, 10] identifies the three polyad quantum numbers... [Pg.466]

A conical intersection is expected above 10,000 cm 1 that has not yet been rigorously identified. This conical intersection also creates important anharmonicities in the fully diagonalized effective Hamiltonians of Weigert... [Pg.528]

In tetra-atomic molecules that are linear, the number of degrees of freedom is F =7, which again considerably complicates the analysis. Nevertheless, the dynamics of such systems can turn out to be tractable if the anharmonicities may be considered as perturbations with respect to the harmonic zero-order Hamiltonian. In such cases, the regular classical motions remain dominant in phase space as compared with the chaotic zones, and the edge periodic orbits of subsystems again form a skeleton for the bulk periodic orbits. [Pg.529]

In the energy range 0-16,000 cm-1, the vibrational Hamiltonian of this molecule can be modeled by a Dunham expansion without anharmonic resonances of the classical form [112]... [Pg.529]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.188 ]




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