The Role of Depth and Flatness of a Potential Energy Surface in Chemical Reaction Dynamics
2020, Volume 25, Number 5, pp. 453-475
Author(s): Lyu W., Naik S., Wiggins S.
Author(s): Lyu W., Naik S., Wiggins S.
In this study, we analyze how changes in the geometry of a potential energy surface
in terms of depth and flatness can affect the reaction dynamics.We formulate depth and flatness
in the context of one and two degree-of-freedom (DOF) Hamiltonian normal form for the saddlenode
bifurcation and quantify their influence on chemical reaction dynamics [1, 2]. In a recent
work, García-Garrido et al. [2] illustrated how changing the well-depth of a potential energy
surface (PES) can lead to a saddle-node bifurcation. They have shown how the geometry of
cylindrical manifolds associated with the rank-1 saddle changes en route to the saddle-node
bifurcation. Using the formulation presented here, we show how changes in the parameters of
the potential energy control the depth and flatness and show their role in the quantitative
measures of a chemical reaction. We quantify this role of the depth and flatness by calculating
the ratio of the bottleneck width and well width, reaction probability (also known as transition
fraction or population fraction), gap time (or first passage time) distribution, and directional
flux through the dividing surface (DS) for small to high values of total energy. The results
obtained for these quantitative measures are in agreement with the qualitative understanding
of the reaction dynamics.
Access to the full text on the Springer website |