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The Wonderful World of Molecular Anions

06-10 February 2023

University of Utah
United States
17:00 CET 06-Feb-23

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Professor Jack Simons

Department of Chemistry, University of Utah, USA

In this seminar, I will discuss several of the challenges one faces when using quantum chemistry methods to treat negative molecular ions, and I will show how one can address these challenges. The species and phenomena that will be treated include dipole-bound anions, multiply charged anions, stabilization methods for treating metastable state energies and lifetimes, damage to DNA caused by electron attachment, and more.

Keywords: anions, quantum chemistry, metastable states, dipole-bound, DNA damage


References

[1]  J. Simons, Molecular Anions, J. Phys. Chem. A 112, 6401-6511  (2008). This article offers a lot of information about the experimental and theoretical treatment of molecular anions although it is now a bit outdated.
[2] P. Skurski, M. Gutowski, and J. Simons, How to Choose a One-Electron Basis Set to Reliably Describe a Dipole-Bound Anion, Int. J. Quantum Chem., 80, 1024-1038 (2000).
[3] Iwona Anusiewicz, Piotr Skurski, and Jack Simons, Finding Valence Antibonding Levels while Avoiding Rydberg, Pseudo-continuum, and Dipole-Bound Orbitals, J. Am. Chem. Soc. (2022)
[4] https://hec.utah.edu/simons-group/anions/index.php. This web link offers an on-line version of much of the material contained in [1] but with a bit more detail.
[5] J. Simons, Resonance State Lifetimes from Stabilization Graphs, J. Chem. Phys., 75, 2465-2467 (1981). This article describes the simple method I discuss for estimating lifetimes.
[6]  K. Gasperich, K. D. Jordan, and J. Simons, Strategy for Creating Rational Fraction Fits to Stabilization Graph Data on Metastable Electronic States, Chem. Phys. 515, 342-349 (2018). This reference discusses some of the more advanced methods for finding lifetimes of metastable states.
[7] J. Simons, Propensity Rules for Vibration-Induced Electron Detachment of Anions, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 103, 3971-3976 (1981). This paper shows how non-adiabatic couplings can induce electron ejection from anions and why these events have unusual selection rules.

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Financial Support

The 2025 edition of the Virtual Winter School on Computational Chemistry is proudly sponsored by the School of Chemistry at the University of Edinburgh.


The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art is pleased to provide support for the 2024 VWSCC through a generous donation from Alan Fortier.

We thank Leibniz Institute for Catalysis (LIKAT) and CECAM for their support.