Quantum chemistry
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- This article is an historical introduction to the theoretical concepts of quantum chemistry. For information on computational methods in chemistry and more recent and/or technical aspects of quantum chemistry, see computational chemistry. For theoretical concepts related to chemistry see theoretical chemistry.
Electronic structure
The first step in solving a quantum chemical problem is usually solving the Schrödinger equation (or Dirac equation in relativistic quantum chemistry) with the electronic molecular Hamiltonian. This is called determining the electronic structure of the molecule. It can be said that the electronic structure of a molecule or crystal is the chemistry.
Wave model
The foundation of quantum mechanics and quantum chemistry is the wave model, in which the atom is a small dense, positively charged nucleus surrounded by electrons. Unlike the earlier Bohr model of the atom, however, the wave model describes electrons as "clouds" moving in orbitals, and their positions are represented by probability distributions rather than discrete points. The strength of this model lies in its predictive power. Specifically, it predicts the pattern of chemically similar elements found in the periodic table. The wave model is so named because electrons exhibit properties (such as interference) traditionally associated with waves. See wave-particle duality.
Valence bond
Molecular orbital
Density functional theory
Chemical dynamics
A further step can consist of solving the Schrödinger equation with the total molecular Hamiltonian in order to study the motion of molecules. Direct solution of the Schrödinger equation is called quantum molecular dynamics, within the semiclassical approximation semiclassical molecular dynamics, and within the classical mechanics framework molecular dynamics (MD). Statistical approaches, using for example Monte Carlo methods, are also possible.
Adiabatic chemical dynamics
Non-adiabatic chemical dynamics
Quantum chemistry and quantum field theory
The application of quantum field theory (QFT) to chemical systems and theories has become increasingly common in the modern physical sciences. One of the first and most fundamentally explicit appearances of this is seen in the theory of the photomagneton. In this system, plasmas, which are ubiquitous in both physics and chemistry, are studied in order to determine the basic quantization of the underlying bosonic field. However, quantum field theory is of interest in many fields of chemistry, including: nuclear chemistry, astrochemistry, sonochemistry, and quantum hydrodynamics.See also
- Computational chemistry
- Theoretical chemistry
- Physical chemistry
- Atomic physics
- Theoretical physics
- Condensed matter physics
- International Academy of Quantum Molecular Science
- Quantum electrochemistry
Further reading
- Pauling, L., and Wilson, E. B. Introduction to Quantum Mechanics with Applications to Chemistry (Dover Publications) ISBN 0486648710
- Atkins, P.W. Physical Chemistry (Oxford University Press) ISBN 0198792859
- McWeeny, R. Coulson's Valence (Oxford Science Publications) ISBN 0198551444
- Landau, L.D. and Lifshitz, E.M. Quantum Mechanics:Non-relativistic Theory(Course of Theoretical Physics vol.3) (Pergamon Press)
External links
- [The Sherrill Group - Notes]
- [ChemViz Curriculum Support Resources]
- [Early ideas in the history of quantum chemistry]
- [QMC@Home (Distributed Computing)]
Nobel lectures by quantum chemists
- [Walter Kohn's Nobel lecture]
- [Rudolph Marcus' Nobel lecture]
- [Robert Mulliken's Nobel lecture]
- [Linus Pauling's Nobel lecture]
- [John Pople's Nobel lecture]
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