One
of the factors that limits the application of the single active
electron (SAE) formalism to simulate the high harmonic generation
(HHG) spectra of atoms and molecules using the time-dependent Schrödinger
equation (TDSE) is the unknown model effective one-dimensional potential
energy (V(x)) curve for the SAE.
In the present contribution, we show that V(x) can be constructed from the one-dimensional molecular
electrostatic potential (MEP) of the respective cation to access theoretical
HHG spectra not only for simple atoms but also for multielectron complex
molecules.
Molecular attosecond science has already started contributing to our fundamental understanding of ultrafast purely electron dynamics in isolated molecules under vacuum. Extending attosecond science to the liquid phase is expected to offer new insight into the influence of a surrounding solvent environment on the attosecond electron dynamics in solvated molecules. A systematic theoretical investigation of the attochemistry of solvated molecules would help one design attosecond experiments under ambient conditions to explore the attochemistry in a liquid environment. With this goal in mind, for the first time, we have explored the attochemistry of molecules surrounded by different non-polar solvent environments. For this work, we have focused on the attosecond charge conduction through gold-thiolate and gold-selenolate linkages following the vertical ionization of the S/Se(CH)-CH-phenyl-X unit anchored to a gold dimeric cluster (Au), where X represents either a strong electron donating N(CH) group or a strong electron withdrawing NO group. To model solvation effects on the attochemistry of molecules containing gold-chalcogen linkages, we have used an implicit solvent model (Polarizable Continuum Model) under the density functional theory (DFT) formalism for non-polar solvents. We have found that the charge migration time scale in molecules becomes faster in the presence of the solvent environment as compared to that under vacuum. Charge oscillation does not damp quickly in molecules surrounded by the solvent environment as compared to that under vacuum. Furthermore, the direction of the charge migration may change in molecules when they are surrounded by the solvent environment as compared to that under vacuum. Thus, the present work has laid the foundation, for the first time, for thinking of the attochemistry into the realm of liquids.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.