Abstract
Nuclear quantum effects (NQEs) are known to impact a number of features associated
with chemical reactivity and physicochemical properties, particularly for light atoms
and at low temperatures. In the imaginary time path integral formalism, each atom
is mapped onto a “ring polymer” whose spread is related to the quantum mechanical
uncertainty in the particle’s position i.e. its thermal wavelength. A number of metrics
have previously been used to investigate and characterize this spread and explain effects
arising from quantum delocalization, zero-point energy, and tunnelling. Many of these
shape metrics consider just the instantaneous structure of the ring polymers. However, given the significant interest in methods such as centroid molecular dynamics and ring
polymer molecular dynamics that link the molecular dynamics of these ring polymers to
real time properties, there exists significant opportunity to exploit metrics that also allow
for the study of the fluctuations of the atom delocalization in time. Here we consider the
ring polymer delocalization from the perspective of computational topology, specifically
persistent homology, which describes the 3-dimensional arrangement of point cloud
data (i.e. atomic positions). We employ the Betti sequence probability distribution to
define the ensemble of shapes adopted by the ring polymer. The Wasserstein distances
of Betti sequences adjacent in time are used to characterize fluctuations in shape, where
the Fourier transform and associated principal components provides added information
differentiating atoms with different NQEs based on their dynamic properties. We
demonstrate this methodology on two representative systems, a glassy system consisting
of two atom types with dramatically different de Broglie thermal wavelengths, and
ab initio molecular dynamics simulation of an aqueous 4 M HCl solution where the
H-atoms are differentiated based on their participation in proton transfer reactions.
Keywords: path integral molecular dynamics, persistent homology, quantum
delocalization, proton transfer, Wasserstein distances.
Supplementary materials
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ChemRXiv SuppMtls PHMtrcsQtmFlctns
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