Periodic Reporting for period 1 - ATTOP (ATTOsecond Photochemistry: controlling chemical reactions with electrons)
Période du rapport: 2022-10-01 au 2025-03-31
We also performed a methodological project regarding the simulation of attochemical processes in molecules. Such molecular processes can, in principle, be simulated with various nonadiabatic dynamics methods, yet the impact of the approximations underlying the methods was rarely assessed. We evaluated the performances of widely used mixed quantum-classical approaches, Tully surface hopping and classical Ehrenfest methods, against the high-accuracy DD-vMCG quantum dynamics. This comparison was conducted for the valence ionisation of fluorobenzene. Analysing the nuclear motion induced in the branching space of the nearby conical intersection, the results showed that the mixed quantum-classical methods reproduce quantitatively the average motion of a quantum wavepacket when initiated on a single electronic state. However, they fail to properly capture the nuclear motion induced by an electronic wavepacket along the derivative coupling, the latter originating from the quantum electronic coherence property, key to attochemistry. Our simulations further validate the control over the molecular motion in the branching space achieved by tuning the initial electronic wave packet composition. They also unravel both interstate and intrastate quantum interferences that leave clear signatures of attochemistry and charge-directed dynamics in the shape of the autocorrelation function. The latter is accessible experimentally via high-harmonic spectroscopy (HHS). We collaborated with the experimental team of Prof. Jon Marangos (Imperial College London). The predicted autocorrelation functions are in very good agreement with experimentally measured dynamics via HHS in both benzenes and fluoro-benzene, highlighting the sensitivity of autocorrelation functions to the composition of the initial electronic wavepacket. These results are direct evidence of attochemical control.
- Non-adiabatic dynamics simulations shedding light on the timescale, yield and mechanisms of H-loss, H2-loss and ethylene-ethylidene isomerisation upon ionisation and excitation of ethylene. This goes well beyond pre-existing state-of-the-art dynamics simulations on this system. This is thanks to a higher electronic structure level used (CASSCF with a large active space), allowing for the description for bond breaking and bond formation.
- Assessment of non-adiabatic dynamics methods for the simulation of attochemical processes in molecules and demonstration that fully quantum dynamics methods are required. This provides essential guidelines, for the whole community, regarding the simulations of attochemical processes in molecules.
- Clear signature of not only the ability to influence the induced molecular dynamics through electronic wavepackets, but also of the coherent behaviour and interference effects that may influence chemical dynamics on ultrafast timescales, through a combined theoretical-experimental work on fluoro-benzene. It is a direct theoretical and experimental evidence of attochemical control, but also of the coherent behaviour and quantum interference effects that drive it.