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I. Quantum dissipation theory with application to electron transfer. II. Protein folding kinetics and thermodynamics: A mean-field Ising model

Posted on:2007-05-26Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (People's Republic of China)Candidate:Mo, YanFull Text:PDF
GTID:2440390005464440Subject:Chemistry
Abstract/Summary:
This thesis consists of two parts. Part I is related to the subject in theoretical quantum statistical dynamics, while Part II concerns about the statistical mechanics approach to protein folding problems.; In Part I, we report our development of quantum dissipation theory (QDT) and applications. In the aspect of theoretical development, we construct various second-order formulations in the weak system-bath coupling regime, and further an exact theory applicable to arbitrary non-Markovian bath interaction. We also develop an exact, nonperturbative electron transfer theory, and elucidate some important issues, such as he quantum solvation effect in relation to reaction mechanism, and the complex dependence of both kinetics and thermodynamics on solvent environment. In the application aspect, we consider the optical spectroscopy and laser control of molecular dynamics, besides the electron transfer problems. The details of Part I are as follows.; Chapter 1 presents an overview on the early development of quantum dissipation theory, together with some basic knowledge and techniques on non-dissipative quantum mechanics.; In chapter 2, besides the well-established linear response theory and fluctuation-dissipation theorem, we construct also the exact theory of driven Brownian oscillator (DBO). Considered here is a harmonic system, coupled linearly with an arbitrary harmonic bath and an arbitrary external field. The exact DBO results and their implications will be exploited later in the development of approximated QDT formalism in general. Propose in this chapter is also a parameterization scheme for the efficient treatment of non-Markovian interaction bath effects on the reduced system dynamics, both approximate and exact, to be developed soon.; In chapter 3, we report our development on various complete second-order QDT (CS-QDT) formalisms. In particular, we propose a novel CS-QDT construction, in which the dissipation superoperator is separated into field-free and field-dressed parts, and then treat the former in a memory-free prescription while the latter in terms of memory kernel. Both the initial system-bath coupling and the correlated non-Markovian dissipation and external field drive effects are treated properly within the second-order level. Various forms of CS-QDT differ at their resummation schemes that partially include high order system-bath coupling effects. On the basis of the comparison with the exact DBO results, together with the consideration of numerical stability and efficiency, the aforementioned unconventional CS-QDT form is found to be the overall best among various approximation schemes. Applications of the CS-QDT are made to some optical response and control of molecular dynamics processes.; In chapter 4, we construct an exact QDT, via direct calculus oil Feynman-Vernon dissipation functionals. The resulting theory, in terms of hierarchically coupled differential equations of motion (EOM) instead of path integral, facilitates the numerical study of quantum dissipation that is in general nonperturbative and non-Markovian. We further construct the equivalent continued fraction formalism, allowing the quantum dissipation be resolved efficiently in an inward-recursive manner.; Chapter 5 focuses on our revisit of the elementary electron transfer (ET) process, on the basis of the exact reduced density matrix dynamics theory developed in chapter 4. An analytical and exact expression for the ET rate in Debye solvents at finite temperature is further arrived by using the Dyson equation technique. Not only does it recover the celebrated Marcus' inversion and Kramers' turnover behaviors of the ET reaction rate, the new theory also predicts some interesting and unexplored characteristics of equilibrium thermodynamics functions as their dependence on the solvent environment. The nature solvation, quantum versus classical, is also investigated in its relation to the distinct ET mechanics.; The concluding remarks on Part...
Keywords/Search Tags:Quantum, Dynamics, Electron transfer, Part, CS-QDT, Exact
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