Benchmarking Proton Tunneling Splittings with a Wavefunction-Based Double-Well Model: Application to the Formic Acid Dimer
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2511.01903v1
- Date: Fri, 31 Oct 2025 05:45:15 GMT
- Title: Benchmarking Proton Tunneling Splittings with a Wavefunction-Based Double-Well Model: Application to the Formic Acid Dimer
- Authors: Krishna Kingkar Pathak,
- Abstract summary: Proton tunneling across hydrogen bonds is a fundamental quantum effect with implications for spectroscopy, stability and biomolecular stability.<n>Here we develop a wavefunction-based framework for tunneling splittings using a Cornell-type double-well potential and apply it as a benchmark for hydrogen-bond tunneling.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: Proton tunneling across hydrogen bonds is a fundamental quantum effect with implications for spectroscopy, catalysis, and biomolecular stability. While state-of-the-art instanton and path-integral methods provide accurate multidimensional tunneling splittings, simplified one-dimensional models remain valuable as conceptual and benchmarking tools. Here we develop a wavefunction-based framework for tunneling splittings using a Cornell-type double-well potential and apply it as a benchmark for hydrogen-bond tunneling. Analytical WKB estimates and numerical finite-difference solutions are compared across a range of barrier parameters, showing consistent agreement. As a test case, we map the formic acid dimer (FAD) barrier onto a quartic double-well model parameterized to reproduce the reported barrier height of $V_b \\approx 2848~\\text{cm}^{-1}$. The resulting tunneling splitting of about $0.037~\\text{cm}^{-1}$ matches the reduced-dimensional calculations of Qu and Bowman. The close agreement between numerical and semiclassical results highlights the pedagogical and diagnostic value of one-dimensional models, while comparison with molecular benchmarks clarifies their limitations relative to full multidimensional quantum treatments.
Related papers
- Structure-Informed Estimation for Pilot-Limited MIMO Channels via Tensor Decomposition [51.56484100374058]
This paper formulates pilot-limited channel estimation as low-rank tensor completion from sparse observations.<n>Experiments on synthetic channels demonstrate 10-20,dB normalized mean-square error (NMSE) improvement over least-squares (LS)<n> evaluations on DeepMIMO ray-tracing channels show 24-44% additional NMSE reduction over pure tensor-based methods.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2026-02-03T23:38:05Z) - 1d-qt-ideal-solver: 1D Idealized Quantum Tunneling Solver with Absorbing Boundaries [0.0]
1d-qt-ideal-solver is an open-source Python library for simulating quantum tunneling dynamics.<n>Numba just-in-time compilation achieves performance comparable to compiled languages.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-12-27T16:13:44Z) - Revisiting the Broken Symmetry Phase of Solid Hydrogen: A Neural Network Variational Monte Carlo Study [42.40832340604796]
We show that even the broken symmetry phase observed around 130GPa requires revisiting due to its intricate coupling of electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom.<n>Our calculations reveal an unreported ground-state structure candidate for the broken symmetry phase with $Cmcm$ space group symmetry.<n>These results shed new light on the phase diagram of high-pressure hydrogen and call for further experimental verifications.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-12-19T15:36:27Z) - Ring-polymer instanton theory for tunneling between asymmetric wells [0.0]
We develop a new formulation of instanton theory based on a projected flux correlation function.<n>The theory is then applied to study tunneling between non-degenerate minima in the biomolecule $alpha$-fenchol.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-10-30T15:18:03Z) - Efficiency of Dynamical Decoupling for (Almost) Any Spin-Boson Model [44.99833362998488]
We analytically study the dynamical decoupling of a two-level system coupled with a structured bosonic environment.<n>We find sufficient conditions under which dynamical decoupling works for such systems.<n>Our bounds reproduce the correct scaling in various relevant system parameters.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-09-24T04:58:28Z) - Many-body tunneling in a double-well potential [0.0]
We present an approach for evaluating Wannier functions, offering an alternative perspective on their role in many-body systems.<n>We address nonstandard Hubbard terms and demonstrate their critical influence on many-body dynamics.<n>Our findings have important implications for phenomena such as superconductivity in twisted bilayer graphene and metal-insulator transitions.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-09-06T14:36:31Z) - Theory of free fermions under random projective measurements [43.04146484262759]
We develop an analytical approach to the study of one-dimensional free fermions subject to random projective measurements of local site occupation numbers.
We derive a non-linear sigma model (NLSM) as an effective field theory of the problem.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-04-06T15:19:33Z) - Modeling the space-time correlation of pulsed twin beams [68.8204255655161]
Entangled twin-beams generated by parametric down-conversion are among the favorite sources for imaging-oriented applications.
We propose a semi-analytic model which aims to bridge the gap between time-consuming numerical simulations and the unrealistic plane-wave pump theory.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-01-18T11:29:49Z) - The tunneling splitting and the Kramers theory of activated processes [0.0]
The isomorphism between the Fokker-Planck-Smoluchowski operator and the Born-Oppenheimer quantum Hamiltonian is the key element of this method.
The comparison with exact values of the tunneling splittings shows a much better accuracy than WKB semiclassical estimates.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-10-27T14:02:07Z) - Beyond the Tavis-Cummings model: revisiting cavity QED with atomic
ensembles [0.0]
The interaction of an ensemble of $N$ two-level atoms with a single mode electromagnetic field is described by the Tavis-Cummings model.
Here, we show that this is only justified if the effective scattering rate into non-cavity modes is negligible.
We show that the predictions of our model can differ quantitatively and even qualitatively from those obtained with the Tavis-Cummings model.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-07-09T17:55:06Z) - Autoencoder-driven Spiral Representation Learning for Gravitational Wave
Surrogate Modelling [47.081318079190595]
We investigate the existence of underlying structures in the empirical coefficients using autoencoders.
We design a spiral module with learnable parameters, that is used as the first layer in a neural network, which learns to map the input space to the coefficients.
The spiral module is evaluated on multiple neural network architectures and consistently achieves better speed-accuracy trade-off than baseline models.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-07-09T09:03:08Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.